Winter in the Blood Author:James Welch The Indian fate is behind every page of this book. The form it takes is the encompassing indifference of an intelligent and sensitive young man to alomst everything in his life, a life which is already well along the way to self-destruction. For what is shattered in him becomes, in the course of the novel, subtly connected to his sha... more »ttered heritage, and, by the final scene, the two have become one: a man living out the tragedy of his people « less
Excellent depiction of the result of the immoral Indian wars in contemporary Indian Country. What was done to Native Americans (no different from any place Westerners decided that they could 'own' a peoples and their resources) was an outrage, and this book shows its effect. For a fuller picture, read FOOLS CROW by the same author, James Welch, himself a Native American. This book is a predecessor to WINTER IN THE BLOOD; we all know highlights of history like Wounded Knee and Custer's Last Stand (though we don't know about pieces of history from the stealing of Indian lands to using Native Americans for target practice and an early use of 'germ warfare' (giving Native Americans the blankets of those soldiers who had died of smallpox...). Too many Americans don't recognize that 'they were here first'; many don't even realize that there are ANY Native Americans living east of the Mississippi!!!
For me this book was a two-sided sword. It was a story of a young man troubled by his own past and unsecure future. He is desperately searching for himself but looking in all the wrong places until he listens to an old blind man's wisdom. Once he realizes who he is and how his life is important he admits some respect for himself and his roots. This book was written/released in 1974 and is currently becoming a movie.