From the premier chronicler of early Native American life and the bestselling author of "Follow the River" and "From Sea to Shining Sea" comes a fact-based novel of a Quaker child raised by a frontier tribe following the Revolutionary War.
From the premier chronicler of early Native American life and the bestselling author of "Follow the River" and "From Sea to Shining Sea" comes a fact-based novel of a Quaker child raised by a frontier tribe following the Revolutionary War.
The Slocum family of Northeastern Pennsylvania are the best of the white settlers, peace-loving Quakers who believe that the Indians hold the Light of God inside. It is from this good-hearted family that Frances is abducted during the Revolutionary war.
As the child's terror subsides, she is slowly drawn into the sacred work and beliefs of her adoptive mother and of all the women of these Eastern tribes. Frances becomes Maconakwa, the Little Bear Woman of the Miami Indians. Then, long after the Indians are beaten and their last hope, Tecumseh, is killed, the Slocums hear word of their long-lost daughter and head out to Indiana to meet their beloved Frances. But for Maconakwa, it is a moment of truth, the test of whether her heart is truly a red one.
"COMPELLING...Thom has woven a story as carefully as any native weaver does a piece of fabric".
-- Indianapolis Star
James Alexander Thom lives in the Indiana hill country near Bloomington with his wife, Dark Rain of the Shawnee Nation, United Remnant Band. He has been a U.S. Marine, a newspaper and magazine editor, and a member of the faculty at the Indiana University Journalism School. Thom is the author of Follow the River, Long Knife, From Sea to Shining Sea, Panther in the Sky, for which he won the prestigious Western Writers of America Spur award for best historical novel, and The Children of First Man.
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