Taken in by the Tuscarora Indians after their homestead is destroyed by marauding war parties, the Billips family is amazed by the freedom and acceptance they experience in their new Appalachian home as they become part of the tribe.
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This interesting historical romance, which purports to be based on family lore from the author's Native American heritage, nonetheless lapses into colonialist fantasy. Lucas, in this first novel, tells the story of John Billips and his family on the Appalachian frontier. Forced to flee Philadelphia after killing a drunken British soldier, Billips takes his family into the wilderness. Settling in an isolated mountain valley in the late 17th century, the brood is befriended by Lame Crow, a Tuscarora, who helps them learn the tricks necessary for survival in the alien environment. After he is forced to return to his people, Lame Crow sends Runs With The Wind, a 13-year-old youth, to check on the white family he has adopted. When the lad finds them menaced by an approaching Apalachee war party, he leads them to the Tuscaroras. The entire family is then accepted and adopted into the clan. Unable to return either to their home or to civilization, the family settles into life among the Indians. The boys train to become warriors; the daughter, Priscilla (known as Sassy), marries Runs With The Wind, to whom she was attracted at first sight. War with the colonists, who are greedy to have the Indian lands, shatters their idyllic existence. Without hesitation, the family sides with their new people over their old. When Sassy goes off on her own, she is discovered and taken in by white settlers, who assume she has been an Indian captive. The remainder of the novel involves Sassy's attempts to escape and return to her family and her adoptive people and the tribe's efforts to locate her. But even when a reunion occurs, things will never be the same. The Tuscaroras' independent existence is coming to an end. Despite an attempt at an affirmative portrayal of Natives, the Indians come off as stereotypes, alternately romanticized and described as grunting primitives. -- Copyright ©1994, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Told in a clean and straightforward fashion, this is the powerful story of a colonial family integrated into a doomed Indian nation. John and Lydia Billips and their three young children, Jackson, Sassy and "the baby," are rescued from renegade Apalachees by members of the Tuscarora and are taken to their remote village in the Appalachian Mountains. The Billipses' new life seems like paradise while, over the next six years, the children grow up secure and cherished. The concept of the noble savage is stretched to its limits, as Lucas (herself of Cherokee descent) extolls the clan's reverence for nature, its deep spirituality and its insistence on honesty and trust. At the same time, she uses the family's acculturation to offer a primer on American Indian lore, from customs and ceremonies to tracking and basketry. But it's the early 1700s, and idyllic times are coming to an end for the Tuscarora as white settlers move inexorably west ("The white man is striding across the face of Mother Earth spreading evil, killing and burning and stealing"). When Sassy is abducted by two white brothers from Pennsylvania, a clash between the cultures becomes inevitable--but where do the Billipses' loyalties lie? The action never flags in this first novel, which, despite its heavy bias, will have readers caring deeply about its spirited characters.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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