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Indian Nations of North America

Price:$40.00

Item#:6200664

Qty: Available, ready to ship.






Walk with the indigenous people who settled North America —and with their descendants, whose more than 500 tribes range from the Arctic Circle across the Great Plains and to the Eastern Seaboard. Lakota, Cherokee, Navajo, Haida: these groups and many others are profiled in engaging entries and portrayed in magnificent images and maps that authentically evoke each tribe's history and character. Organized into eight geographical regions, this encyclopedic reference gives fascinating details about key tribes within each area: their beliefs, sustenance, shelter, alliances, interaction with nature, historic events, and more. Learn about the spiritual and cultural traditions of Native Americans across the continent. Investigate how and when each tribe came into contact with Europeans, and how their lives changed. This is the definitive, insightful reference on Native Americans, captivating and informative for all who appreciate history, diverse cultures, stunning images, and the artistry of maps.


  • Hardcover
  • 384 pages; 140 color photographs, 140 black & white photographs, 12 maps, 20 illustrations
  • 9 1/8" x 10 7/8"
  • © 2010

Native American expert and Smithsonian curator emeritus Herman Viola consulted on and wrote the foreword for Indian Nations of North America. The book's eight Native American authors include renowned academics, national leaders, lecturers, and authors. Among them are noted lecturer George Horsecapture; professor and art expert Rick W. Hill, Sr.; Monacan official Karenne Wood; and National Museum of the American Indian training director Jill Norwood.


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Indian Nations of North America
 
4.0

(based on 5 reviews)

Ratings Distribution

  • 5 Stars

     

    (3)

  • 4 Stars

     

    (1)

  • 3 Stars

     

    (0)

  • 2 Stars

     

    (0)

  • 1 Stars

     

    (1)

80%

of respondents would recommend this to a friend.

Pros

  • Deeply informative (4)
  • Easy to understand (4)
  • Well written (4)

Cons

    Best Uses

    • Gift (3)
      • Reviewer Profile:
      • Casual reader (3)

    Reviewed by 5 customers

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    4.0

    More than met my expectations!

    By 2HappyBears

    from Waterville, Maine

    About Me Casual Reader

    Verified Buyer

    Pros

    • Deeply Informative
    • Easy To Understand
    • Well Written

    Cons

      Best Uses

      • Gift
      • Older Readers

      Comments about Indian Nations of North America:

      My husband is part Native American Indian and this book helped him to further pursue his "roots". He was given this book as a gift.

       
      5.0

      A wealth of information.

      By leisure man

      from sask, can

      About Me Casual Reader

      Verified Buyer

      Pros

      • Deeply Informative
      • Easy To Understand
      • Well Written

      Cons

        Best Uses

        • Gift
        • Reference

        Comments about Indian Nations of North America:

        It provides a good understanding of our first nations.

        (0 of 8 customers found this review helpful)

         
        1.0

        Revisionist History=Omissive History"

        By no nickname

        from Columbus, Ohio

        About Me Bookworm

        Verified Reviewer

        Pros

          Cons

          • Biased
          • Not The Authors Best
          • Not What I Expected
          • Sloppy Research

          Best Uses

          • Coffee Table Ornament

          Comments about Indian Nations of North America:

          I found it appalling there was no mention of the enslavement of blacks by the Five Civilized Tribes (the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Muscogee, and Seminole)?! Why was that conventiently omitted from this book?! Wilma Mankiller in her autobiography described the enslaved blacks on her ancestors plantation as "members who were part of the family"?! The only remotest mention of slavery was the caption about John Ross (pp.72) and it never described him as a slavemaster? As a black woman I find it very difficult to empathize with a marginalized and oppressed culture whom took part in the worst holocaust in human history - American Chattle Slavery...I actually do not empathize nor sympathize at all! What is also deporable, is the glossing over of the genocides committed by tribes of one nation against the tribes of another nation well before the white man sat foot in the Americas!

          (3 of 3 customers found this review helpful)

           
          5.0

          Nat Geo, Indian Nations of NA 2010 384pp

          By Beskeet

          from Shawano, WI

          About Me Bookworm

          Pros

          • Continually Relevant
          • Deeply Informative
          • Easy To Understand
          • Groundbreaking Research
          • Well Written

          Cons

          • Not What I Expected

          Best Uses

          • Gift
          • Older Readers
          • Reference
          • Special Needs
          • Travel Reading
          • Younger Readers

          Comments about Indian Nations of North America:

          Try this...Mahikan and Mohican are not the same as Mohegan~ and~ Mahican is neither, either of any of the two above...I want the American Public to know.

          ...Chapter 1 Northeast heads South...

          the 'split in format' is of interest..pp61-64, and 3

          Somewhat inaccurate, but all in all a gorgeous book...

          (5 of 5 customers found this review helpful)

           
          5.0

          Fascinating

          By Joe

          from Surfside, FL

          About Me Casual Reader

          Verified Reviewer

          Pros

          • Deeply Informative
          • Easy To Understand
          • Groundbreaking Research
          • Well Written

          Cons

            Best Uses

              Comments about Indian Nations of North America:

              Great for casual reading or research, beautiful pictures and maps,contains information that I have not encountered anywhere else.

              Displaying reviews 1-5

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