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Rating: Summary: Thunder Rolling in the Mountains Review: Have you ever read a book where people are on the run and it seems like one big chase? This is your book. The main character in this book is an Indian girl whose name is “Sound of Running Feet”. Her tribe and basically her entire family is run out of her homeland by a mean one armed General who is a white man. The General and his army give this Indian Tribe thirty days to get off the land so they can bring people in to dig for gold. The Tribe does move off the land but every night they run into small wars with the Army so they are constantly being hunted and shot down. Sound of Running Feet was supposed to be married and planning for her wedding to “Swan Necklace” her fiancee. He becomes a big warrior fighting every night with the rest of the tribe. They are constantly in battle and it’s interesting how many twists this story takes. It is all set in South Dakota as they move out of the state. How do they find food to live on, and water to drink? The weather plays a nasty role throughout the entire book. If your looking for sunny skies and happy days? Then this is not the book. It grabs you from the beginning and keeps you hooked till the very end. Believe me!! Sound of Running Feet doesn’t end up in Disneyland.
Rating: Summary: Thunder Rolling in the Mountains Review: If you are interested in learning about the way the Native Americans were once treated, this may be a good choice for you. Personally, I did not appreciate it all. The violence was extensive. It was just plain horrible. I certainly would not recommend it for young children, or anyone is easily upset by violence. Historically however, it is well done. "My Name Is Not Angelica" was better.
Rating: Summary: The Fight for the Land of Freedom Review: The Fight for the Land of Freedom This story is about a tribe of Indians that are fighting for their land from the Blue coats. Every time they fought each other, one of the Indians tribe would lose anywhere from one to fifteen warriors. The Blue coats take no prisoners. They would kill women and children just out of their own greed. The Indians migrate from place to place. They would stop overnight, then they would leave in the morning. Every time the Indians kill a Blue coat, they would replace him with thousands of other Blue coats. Every time the Blue coats killed an Indian they could not replace him. The Indians would get some help here and there, but most of the other tribes they did not trust. I think the book was good because it was about people fighting for their land and no matter how big the challenge was they would find a way to over come it. The Indians could have lived because they were offered to move to another land but all they did was go across a river and walk about forty miles. Then they decided to stand and fight as they moved little each day.
Rating: Summary: zzzzzzzzzzzzz Review: This book offers American school children the opportunity to read about the truth of westward expansion, which most elementary textbooks gloss over or ignore altogether. From the book: My father sighed deeply. "We never make war on women and children, he said, "But the Blue Coats kill our women and children first. That is a shameful way to fight." This book is important educationally to children and adults. Scott O'Dell is my favorite children's author, and this book is my favorite of those I have read. Also recommended: Streams to the River, River to the Sea, Island of the Blue Dolphins, and Zia.
Rating: Summary: zzzzzzzzzzzzz Review: this is so boring. this girl wants her land back and they cant have it so they move. half the tribe dies cuz they are moving away from the land they want. zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz oh sorry i fell asleep writing this review. don't read it.
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