| | ||
| | | |
| |||
| |
|
| |
![]() | ![]() |
|
| | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
![]() Accounting & Finance Architecture Arts & Photography Business & Investing Business Management Computer Science Computers & Internet Education Engineering History Humanities Law Medicine Professional Science Almanacs & Yearbooks Science Atlases & Maps Business Skills Careers Catalogs & Directories Consumer Guides Dictionaries & Thesauruses Education Encyclopedias Etiquette Foreign Languages Fun Facts Genealogy Job Hunting Large Print Law Publishing & Books Quotations Spanish-Language Reference Study Guides Test Prep Central Words & Language Writing Social Sciences Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com
Customer Reviews:Average Customer Rating: house made of dawn Before you read this excellent book you must set aside your expectations of logical sequence and a consistent point of view. Should you fail to do this you'll find the book confusing and difficult. If you become aware of relationships between characters or events, welcome this as a surprise bonus but don't work for it or try to figure it out. Take what comes as it comes and let the book, not you, do all the work. Appreciate the vivid scenery, the masterful use of language, the emotional impact of violence, sex, anger, frustration. Gain insight (by what is presented so you experience it rather than merely through an intellectual understanding of what is explained) into the impact of divrse cultures to which a Naive American strives to adjust. Awesome-ness House Made of Dawn by N. Scott Momaday is a fictional book that tells the story of a young American Indian man named Abel. He hails from an Indian reservation where he has deep family roots and was brought up around their traditional culture. Though the story is fictional it maintains perfect historical accuracy throughout. This novel goes into the issue of Indians participating in WWII and how that affected their culture and the demographic shift that occurred after the war. The fact is that "More than 90 percent of Indians resided on reservations in 1940 and six decades later more than half lived in cities, with a large concentration in southern California." (American Pageant p.830). During the war there were more than 25,000 American Indian men serving in the armed forces and many were famous for being "code talkers" and used their native languages to fool the Japanese. When they returned home after the war these Indians experienced the repercussions of new policies relating to Indians. Abel is thrust into the city as he is basically forced to assimilate into white culture. This story illuminates the plight of these Indians when the US ultimately forced them west and our of their rich reservation land. We can see how these citizens were disregarded directly from the implanting of HCR 108 in 1953 which removed all special status for Native Americans. Powerful!!! N.Scott Momaday like myself is a Native Oklahoman, and that makes me proud. His work is a work of Native power; it breathes in and breathes out as if it were a living being. The Pulitzer Prize was definitely well-deserved in the case of this book. Depressing to Say the Least This book was assigned as a college reading assignment for an American Literature course, so I knew right off that I wasn't in for a real literary treat. The criteria for a reading assignment are: a main character must suffer and then die, and language and plot must work to confuse the reader. If you're looking for an entertaining read, do not choose this novel. If, however, you are looking to read something for the sole purpose of telling others that you have read it, and wish to brag at dinner parties and other things of that nature, this is probably the book for you. Personally, I like to believe that I have better things to do than read something that is depressing, boring, and poorly written. A book worth reading. In Momaday's Pulitzer Prize winning novel "House Made of Dawn," a young Native-American Indian named Abel, returns to Walatow Reservation in New Mexico from World War II. Only to discover that he is caught between two worlds. This book is a great example of Native-American fiction, it reveals the hardships of the Native-Americna people. Anyone who loves a good book based on storytelling and myth will find this book a must-read. It draws the reader in, with it's vivid description of the landscapes and ceremonies. At first I was a bit apprehensive in reading this book, because I have been told this is not a good book to read if you're reading Momaday's work for the first time. Yet, I enjoyed reading it, I apprieciated Momaday's effort to draw the reader in with the struggle of Native-American Indians living in industrial America. I recommend this book to anyone who is in search of a good book. | | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ![]() | |
| |