It's the first I've read about the Maori and the story which is a blend of fact and fiction flows so well. I was a bit worried as the reviewers I saw rated it 3 stars but for me that means I liked the book. It is certainly worth reading. Believed by many of the settlers in New Zealand to be ignorant heathen, the intelligence exhibited by both individuals and the tribes seems quite complex. The role of Maori beliefs in their gods is fascinating. The eruption of Mount Terawera was fortold by a 104-year-old Maori tunga named Tuhuto who was rescued after being buried by ash and mud. His rescue and death is recorded in the country's historical records as is the sighting of the death canoe prior to the eruption. This read makes one want to read much more about the Maori. What a fascinating tribe of people! And Foster weaves a story of the whites who settled the area around the Maori, using one family as a primary focus.
very good historical drama
In the grand tradition of Shogun, bestselling author Alan Dean Foster has created a dazzling epic fantasy of a strange but enchanted land.
"His name was Robert Coffin, but the Maori natives called him Iron Hair. A civilized man in the raw wilderness of New Zealand, he had come to forge a nation at the end of the world--and discovered a magical world beyond his strangest dreams.
A world of astonishing beauty and breathtaking adventure, the natives called it the Land of the Long White Cloud. And Robert Coffin was about to enter it's greatest mystery, cast in the wonderous spell of a shaman whose magic would change his life forever..."