Status
Available
Publication
CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (2017), Edition: 1, 106 pages
Description
Bird Woman is historian James Schultz's biography of Sacajawea culled from the first-hand accounts of various elderly Native Americans who personally knew her. Schultz weaves together the key events in Sacajawea's story, from her traumatic childhood and adolescence, being captured and taken away from her home by a raiding party of Minnetaree, to her unhappy marriage to the interpreter Toussaint Charbonneau, through to her life assisting in Lewis and Clark's exploration of the Pacific Northwest. "A dazzling glimpse into a vanished past." - The New York Times.
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User reviews
LibraryThing member buffalogr
This is one of the many books that have been written about Sacajawea, Indian woman who led the Lewis and Clark expedition west up the "BigRiver" and down the "BigRiver of the WestSide" to the "everywhere salt water." It is a second level account, told through oral tradition during the late 19th
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century and printed during the first part of the 20th century. It appears genuine from that stand point. I can't judge it's authenticity and truth; I'm not an expert. But, it sounded good and tells all the right stories. Those stories, by the way, were a bit difficult to choke down because of the translation from a book published a century ago and recently republished on Kindle. The reader has to wonder if the publisher put any time at all into the translation? Tsa-ka-ka-wia is lost is lost to history between the end of the expedition and when she reappears in her 90s--then tells the story of her trip west with the first long knives. Subsequently, she is honored by Wyoming, the first state to grant universal suffrage, and one of the states that claim her final resting place. Show Less
Language
Original publication date
1918
Physical description
106 p.; 9 inches
ISBN
1547111232 / 9781547111237