People of the Lightning (First North Americans)
 

People of the Lightning (First North Americans)

by Kathleen O'neal Gear, W. Michael Gear

In pre-Columbian Florida, inhabitants of a fishing village are forced to confront their fears about Pondwader, a fifteen-year-old albino boy who legends foretell will unleash a time of destruction on their people. 50,000 first printing. $50,000 ad/promo. (read review)

Top tags: historical fictionnative americanseriesfictiongear (all tags)

Overview: Amazon Reviews

Historical Fiction Reader's Review
  • Rated 5 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, 2008-02-17
This book was a great addition to the People of the....series of the Gear's. If you liked their previous books you will certainly like this one.
Another adventure
  • Rated 4 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, 2007-12-30
In the series. I started reading the series on chance, and now I can't wait until the next book and the next book come out so I can read them. This book in particular had some very interesting characters and I felt great development.
Not Disney, REAL Florida, based on a REAL Place!
  • Rated 5 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, 2006-06-26
I had been reading the series of The First North Americans, when I came to this book I was amazed to find that it is based on an actual find located less than 20 miles from where I live! The Windover site is just 30 miles from Orlando for all of you Disney visitors. All though it is fiction, there is quite a bit a factual research in this book. I thought that the story was amazing and was even better tied to a familiar place. The Florida indians were an amazing people and many of the shell mounds and burial sites are still around if you know where to look of the beaten path of theme parks in Florida. A special book and if you plan to visit Brevard county a must read!
Wow! I must get the others...
  • Rated 3 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, 2006-05-10
A great surprise... a book I expected to get bored with and instead spent a sleepless night reading.
The albino power child Pondwader marries the famous warrior woman Musselwhite, whose clan needs more warriors in order to survive the attacks from Musselwhite's ex-lover's clan, Cottonmouth. Musselwhite's first husband has been taken hostage and tortured as a method of forcing the woman to come to his rescue, and Pondwader (though convinced he'll die freeing the lightning bird he believes is lodged in his own body) knows her only chance to succeed is to take him along. Only, his feeble body and limited sight will prove to be hindering to her desperate fight to save her beloved first husband, and the destruction of the clans' world is sure to come if the power child kills its guardian eagles - by releasing the inner lightningbird. Wich is exactly Cottonmouth's plan.
The writing seems a bit naive, and the adventure is slow to build tension, but the outcome is worth the wait.
The insight on the prehistoric Native American is addictive - even if it may be based largely on imagination. This is a "what if it was like this..." book.
I loved this book. So now I'll have to search for all the others...
A great summer read
  • Rated 5 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, 2006-04-09
Although the various books in this series tend to follow certain patterns, particularly in terms of characterisation, I found this one to break out of the mold a bit. The wise but crazy old medicine man actually IS kind of creepy in People of the Lightning (unlike lovable Dune or sensible Panther from other books in the series), the most beautiful person in the book is not the hero or heroine, the villain actually is who you think it is, and the ending is wholly satisfying.

True to their usual standards of research, the authors pleased me with their knowledge concerning albinism. It usually goes hand in hand with visual difficulties, but so few people outside of the blind community seem to realise this. The descriptions of what the highly light sensitive Pondwader saw were beautiful and reasonable.

If you haven't read any of the books in this series, I'd highly reccommend starting at the beginning (People of the Wolf) but after that, it really doesn't matter. When you read People of the Lightning, have some time set aside, and preferably also some fish to grill. The descriptions make you hungry.
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