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Dangerous Differences by Mac Laird β€” book cover

Dangerous Differences

by Mac Laird
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Overview

Historical Fiction, 1700, American Colonial Virginia, North Carolina, Eastern Woodlands, Wilderness Travel, Education of Indian Youth, Frontier Life, The College of William and Mary Indian School. Williamsburg, Virginia as Capitol, Indian Tribes, Saponi, Tutelo, Occhaneechi, Monacan, Governor Francis Nicholson, Colonial Williamsburg, Trading Ford North Carolina.

About the Author, Mac Laird

After a career in telecommunications with the U.S. Navy, Mac Laird found his niche in America's Eastern Woodlands and began to build with the natural materials from the land in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. In time, he started writing about that land and the people. His first book, "Quail High Above the Shenandoah" (2007) gives a vivid account of building with logs. Nominated by the Library of Virginia for the 14th Annual fiction award, "Dangerous Differences" leads the reader through the wonders of the mountains, rivers, and forests of Virginia and North Carolina and introduces the troubling differences between the frontier Indians and settlers of the new world. The sequel, now under review, will be released May 27, 2012.
The author and his wife, Johnnie, now live in Williamsburg, VA.

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Editorials

Kirkus Reviews

American Indians and colonial settlers struggle to understand each other in Virginia of 1700. In just a few years, the Saponi Indian tribe has lost half of its people to war and the white man's sickness. To make matters worse, it's facing increasing pressure from more powerful Iroquois and Tuscarora raiders, and, of course, from the endless wave of European advancement. Unsure of how to meet these challenges, the Saponi chief sends his 13-year-old son, Kadomico, to school in Williamsburg, the capital of Virginia. This fast-paced work of historical fiction from Laird (Quail High Above the Shenandoah, 2006) then follows Kadomico and other Indian students as they learn more about the English, their "firesticks," their "talking papers" and their religion. Meanwhile, Tuscarora raiders attack a defenseless Nahyssan village and capture a girl on whom Kadomico has a wild crush. Laird vividly describes daily life in 1700 for both colonists and Indians and peppers in some suspenseful fight scenes. Though generally well-researched, the book contains a few factual mistakes. Antelope, for example, never lived in the southeastern United States, and pheasants hadn't yet been introduced. Some of the dialogue also comes across as wooden or hackneyed. "Horses act crazy, no good off-trail, no good in the river. Horses are no good," an Indian warrior says at one point. Overall, though, Laird captures the spirit of the time. His characters, both Indian and white, are overwhelmingly brave, competent and interested in helping their fellow humans (not counting one group of drunken white yokels and the troublemaking Tuscarora). This is mostly a feel-good book. Laird hints at, but never goes into detail, about how the settlers eventually drove the Saponi and their neighbors practically to extinction. Perhaps that will come in the planned sequel. A worthwhile read that focuses on the daily lives of Indians and colonists rather than on famous historical events.

Robert Shultis

Mr. Laird brings to life the personal agonies, frustrations, tragedies and a few triumphs of people living during a critical period in American history.
The book describes, largely through the activities of its fictional characters, the years around 1700, mostly in the area in and around what was then the Virginia Colony. Williamsburg citizens, of course, appear prominently in the book, but so, too, do those inhabitants of the western edges of the Virginia Colony. Those were the natives

Book Details

Published
September 1, 2011
Publisher
Quail High Books
Pages
370
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780982544327

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