A tale of an American frontiersman you didn't hear in the history class.


 
 
The Thread's Must-Read
Hamnet
“The Taking of Jemima Boone” by Matthew Pearl

Buy this book

What I knew about Daniel Boone before reading Matthew Pearl’s terrific new book, “The Taking of Jemima Boone,” probably came from a middle school history teacher: brave, coonskin cap-wearing frontiersman; hero of America's inevitable — or so it seems now — push west.

My guess is that, back then, the teacher probably said very little about the ruthlessness with which Boone took Native American land and the complexity of his relationship with the tribes in the region.

And that’s the question at the heart of Pearl’s book: What happens to the portrait of an American frontiersman, an icon of the earliest days of this nation, when you hear the whole story?

Daniel Boone was, as Pearl writes, “a settler in the most literal sense of the word," which meant that although Boone believed, with all of the entitlement of a white pioneer of the 1700s, that he could live peacefully with the tribes in the wilds of Kentucky, he was going to have his land whether they gave it to him or he had to take it.

Pearl’s story runs on two parallel tracks: the perilous establishment of Boonesboro, an isolated, ramshackle fortress right in the middle of Shawnee and Cherokee hunting grounds; and the kidnapping of Boone’s daughter and two of her friends by a small group of Native Americans who took them into Native lands, with Boone and a posse in hot pursuit.

Boone brings the girls home in a daring rescue but when he kills the son of a powerful American Indian war chief in the clash, he sets off a cycle of violence that will culminate with his own captivity by that same Shawnee leader.

And here’s where Pearl’s book takes the most unexpected turn. Boone develops a deep respect, even love, for the tribal leaders who are holding him prisoner.

Pearl writes: “Boone’s status in the Shawnee community blossomed.”

He is adopted as a son of the chief and renamed “Sheltowee” or “Big Turtle.” And on the day that Daniel Boone finally escapes, he confides in his Native American mother that he is going to flee, telling her, “I can’t help it. I must go and see my family.”

By some accounts, Boone even promised to return.

You can listen to my interview with author Matthew Pearl on my Friday book show on Oct. 29.

— Kerri Miller | MPR News 
Sponsor
Sponsor
 
This Week on The Thread
Ask a Bookseller: Epic fates and myth in this novel set in ancient Greece
"Amber and Clay" by Laura Amy Schlitz
Buy this book

To wrap up September’s theme of books for kids, teens and in-between, Rosalind Casey of Books of Wonder in Manhattan recommended “Amber and Clay” by Newbery Medal-winning author Laura Amy Schlitz.
A book probes how to tell our children the truth about this beautiful, imperiled planet
"Bewilderment" by Richard Powers
Buy this book

Called an “ecological parable,” the Pulitzer Prize-winning author’s latest book, “Bewilderment,” tells the story of a widowed astrobiologist as he struggles to raise his precocious son alone in the midst of our all-too-real climate crisis.
A series makes world events visceral for young readers
"Hurricane: My Story of Resilience" by Salvador Gomez-Colon
Buy this book

When Salvador Gomez-Colon was 15, living in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Hurricane Maria wreaked havoc on the island. He says hurricanes are part of life in Puerto Rico, but Maria was different. Gomez-Colon gives a detailed account in one of the first books in the “I, Witness” series.
'Me Too' founder Tarana Burke says Black girls' trauma shouldn't be ignored
"Unbound: My Story of Liberation and the Birth of the Me Too Movement" by Tarana Burke
Buy this book

As she read the #MeToo stories women were sharing, activist Tarana Burke was blown away and realized that in order to fully help women heal, she needed to tell her own "Me Too" story. She does that in the new memoir.
These poems' sensual details explore the friction between integrity and desire
"Latitude" by Natasha Rao
Buy this book

How we perceive ourselves changes as we grow. And for poet Natasha Rao, self-awareness is valuable. In her debut collection “Latitude,” Rao becomes aware of her animal self by perusing what she unabashedly desires from the world around her.
No one's telling the truth in Joshua Ferris' new novel — or are they?
"A Calling for Charlie Barnes" by Joshua Ferris
Buy this book

Every family is a group of unreliable narrators. Or as the narrator of Joshua Ferris' dazzling new novel puts it: "Every story we tell ourselves is some version of make-believe." And there's no shortage of make-believe in “A Calling for Charlie Barnes,” Ferris' fifth, and best, book.
For fall, 3 novels where great translations make all the difference
"The Luminous Novel" by Mario Levrero, translated by Annie McDermott
"Kaya Days" by Carl de Souza, translated by Jeffrey Zuckerman
"Life Sciences" by Joy Sorman, translated by Lara Vergnaud
Buy these books

Sometimes, it's not the author you choose, it's the translator. So we've picked three novels where the translation will help you discover new things about the text, even if you can read the original.

Preference CenterUnsubscribe

This email was sent by: Minnesota Public Radio
480 Cedar Street Saint Paul, MN, 55101