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Women's Fiction
The Delight Makers

The Delight Makers

List Price: $16.00
Your Price: $10.88
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Historical Insight
Review: Bandelier first published this work in 1890, hoping to reach the general public with the facts he had uncovered (literally) about the Indians of the Four Corners area. As a scientist, he was thorough and certainly the authority on the ancient Pueblos. As a writer, he was more an historian than a story teller. Nevertheless, you will gain a lasting and factually accurate impression of "the way it really was" if you can overlook his stereotyped comments and presumptuous views. Considering the Mesa Verde fires of 2000 (which uncovered several hundred new Anasazi sites) this book rekindles interest in the ancient mysteries of the cliff dwellers. It is easy to see Bandelier's Queres Indians as the Anasazi, and derive a relationship between his Koshare (Delight Makers) and the ongoing affection that modern man holds for Kokopelli. As tedious as some of the reading may be, finishing the book will leave you with a feeling of accomplishment; and you may even retain some words from the language of the times.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Historical Insight
Review: Bandelier first published this work in 1890, hoping to reach the general public with the facts he had uncovered (literally) about the Indians of the Four Corners area. As a scientist, he was thorough and certainly the authority on the ancient Pueblos. As a writer, he was more an historian than a story teller. Nevertheless, you will gain a lasting and factually accurate impression of "the way it really was" if you can overlook his stereotyped comments and presumptuous views. Considering the Mesa Verde fires of 2000 (which uncovered several hundred new Anasazi sites) this book rekindles interest in the ancient mysteries of the cliff dwellers. It is easy to see Bandelier's Queres Indians as the Anasazi, and derive a relationship between his Koshare (Delight Makers) and the ongoing affection that modern man holds for Kokopelli. As tedious as some of the reading may be, finishing the book will leave you with a feeling of accomplishment; and you may even retain some words from the language of the times.


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