Thunder Rolling in the Mountains
By Scott O'Dell
4/5
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About this ebook
Through the eyes of a brave and independent young woman, Scott O'Dell tells of the tragic defeat of the Nez Perce, a classic tale of cruelty, betrayal, and heroism.
This powerful account of the tragic defeat of the Nez Perce Indians in 1877 by the United States Army is narrated by Chief Joseph's strong and brave daughter.
When Sound of Running Feet first sees white settlers on Nez Perce land, she vows to fight them. She'll fight all the people trying to steal her people's land and to force them onto a reservation, including the soldiers with their guns.
But if to fight means only to die, never win, is the fight worth it? When will the killing stop?
Like the author's Newbery Medal-winning classic Island of the Blue Dolphins, Scott O'Dell's Thunder Rolling in the Mountains is a gripping tale of survival, strength, and courage.
Scott O'Dell
Scott O’Dell (1898–1989), one of the most respected authors of historical fiction, received the Newbery Medal, three Newbery Honor Medals, and the Hans Christian Andersen Author Medal, the highest international recognition for a body of work by an author of books for young readers. Some of his many books include The Island of the Blue Dolphins, The Road to Damietta, Sing Down the Moon, and The Black Pearl.
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Reviews for Thunder Rolling in the Mountains
27 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I loved this book! I thought it gave an interesting historical view. I really liked that the book put a lot of detail into the native american culture. i also liked this book because from growing up in the Northwest I could identify places in the book, for example my parents used to take us camping at Wallowa Lake in Oregon, wich is where Sound of Running Feet's tribe's original home was. This is a book I would recommend to children in upper elementary school
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This is the story of the Nez Pierce being driven from their homeland and going to war with the US army, told from the perspective of Chief Joseph's daughter, Sound of Running Feet. We see her tribe struggling to survive as they run from the army and slowly lose their possessions and many lives. Sound of Running Feet eventually strikes off with only her beloved to try to escape to Canada.
Book preview
Thunder Rolling in the Mountains - Scott O'Dell
Copyright
Copyright © 1992 by Elizabeth Hall
All rights reserved. For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.
www.hmhco.com
The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:
O’Dell, Scott, 1898–1989.
Thunder rolling in the mountains / by Scott O’Dell and Elizabeth Hall.
p. cm.
Summary: In the late nineteenth century, a young Nez Perce girl relates how her people were driven off their land by the U.S. Army and forced to retreat north until their eventual surrender.
isbn 0-395-59966-0
1. Nez Perce Indians—Juvenile fiction. [1. Nez Perce Indians—Fiction. 2. Indians of North America—Fiction.] I. Hall,
Elizabeth, 1929– II. Title.
PZ7.0236Th 1992 91-15961
[Fic]—dC20 CIP
AC
eisbn 978-0-547-34974-9
v3.0915
Dedication
To Susan
Foreword
At the time of his death, Scott O’Dell was immersed in the story of Chief Joseph and his people. Their courage and determination in the face of cruelty, betrayal, and bureaucratic ignorance moved him deeply. So deeply that he continued to work on the manuscript in the hospital until two days before he died.
A few years earlier we had followed the trail taken in 1877 by Chief Joseph and his valiant band, from the beautiful Wallowa Valley in Oregon to the bleak battlefield at Bear Paws in Montana. From that trip, from the recollections of Nez Perce and U.S. Army personnel, from the writings of historians, and from Scott’s instructions and musings about the story, I have completed the manuscript, as Scott had asked me to do.
Most of the characters are based on actual Nez Perce, and most of their words and deeds are drawn from recollections of survivors. Swan Necklace is based on three warriors: Strong Eagle, Yellow Wolf, and the historical Swan Necklace. Essential to the book’s existence are the two eyewitness accounts compiled by Lucullus V. McWhorter: Yellow Wolf: His Own Story (the recollections of Chief Joseph’s nephew) and Hear Me, My Chiefs! (based on eyewitness accounts of both sides), as well as Chief Joseph’s Own Story, which he told on his trip to Washington, D.C., in 1897. Other helpful books are Merrill Beal’s I Will Fight No More Forever
: Chief Joseph and the Nez Perce War, Helen Addison Howard’s Saga of Chief Joseph, and Arthur Josephy Jr.’s The Nez Perce Indians and the Opening of the Northwest.
Elizabeth Hall
A map shows the route of the Nez Perce.Follow for extended description
One
That day we dug roots in Deer Meadow. Now we were riding fast for home.
There were seven of us on good horses. I rode in the lead, pulling a travois filled with cous roots. We were on a trail of fallen trees and rock slides, but a storm was coming and it was the shorter way to our village.
I had not ridden the trail for many moons. It had changed a lot in that time. We came upon row after row of fallen trees, trees too jumbled for the travois, and I was forced to go around them.
We came to a treeless spur on the mountain. A north wind blew down from Hawk’s Peak. It was spring but the peak was covered with snow and the wind whipped the snow down upon us in wet clouds. It was hard to see the trail.
I am freezing,
Little Lark, one of my cousins, said. I think we should go back and take the long trail.
The other five riders, two of my cousins among them, agreed with her, but the girls sat on their horses and said nothing.
There’s no hurry I know about,
Little Lark said. We told our mothers before we left to dig roots that we would be gone three suns. The third sun is somewhere in the mist. It will be above us when we reach home.
I gave her my blanket and we rode on and left the mountain spur. The trail dipped down out of the wind into a place of tall grass and a winding stream. It was a beautiful meadow. I remembered riding through it at the beginning of winter when the aspen trees had turned to gold.
The aspen trees were gone. Their branches were lying around, but the trees were gone. They had been sawed off close to the ground.
I saw smoke rising at the far end of the meadow. It came from a cabin made from the aspen trees.
We pulled up our horses and sat staring. The horses were nervous. They raised their heads and sniffed the air. We were more nervous than the horses.
What is it, Sound of Running Feet?
asked my friend White Feather.
White people,
I said. Indians do not build cabins.
Many times when our chieftains talked I heard them speak of the white people. They had not set foot upon our land, only on the land that belonged to a part of our tribe, those who called themselves Christians, those who had sold their land to the Big Father, who lived in a faraway place called Washington. The white people were called settlers and they came to plant seeds, but mostly to dig gold out of the streams and the rocks.
I cautioned my cousins and the other girls to ride at a trot and to keep their eyes to themselves. None of them had a weapon, but I carried a rifle. My grandfather Old Joseph had given it to me more than six snows ago, as he lay dying. Until my fourteenth birthday, three moons ago, it had hung in the lodge. Then I took it from its place, for I, Sound of Running Feet, was then a woman.
In this short time I had learned to use it. At first it was too heavy to lift and I had to prop it up on a branch or on my horse’s back before I could shoot. Now I could handle it and shoot straight. My father did not like the rifle. But Old Joseph had given it to me. It would be bad to speak against the gift now that Old Joseph was dead. He could come back and make trouble.
Three children sat in the cabin doorway. When we rode by, they were as quiet as mice when an owl is around.
Our trail crossed the stream a short way beyond the cabin. A man and a woman with her hair piled on top of her head stood in the stream up to their knees. The woman was shaking a copper pan, letting the stream wash over it. The man kept filling the pan with dirt that a boy of our people brought him in a shovel.
The woman kept working when she caught sight of us, but the man stopped. He was tall and thin and had a scraggly beard and a small bald head. He said something I did not understand, which the boy changed into our words.
He wants to know how you are,
the boy said.
I paused with the others silent behind me and did not answer his question. I said, Ask the white man why he has built a cabin on land that he does not own.
The boy I knew about. He showed Ne-mee-poo tattoos on the back of his hands. He had gone to the mission school near the Snake River, at Lapwai, the Place of the Butterflies. His name was Storm Cloud and he had been mixed up in a murder.
I asked him again. He looked at me with anger in his gaze before he spoke to the white man.
The white man said, and Storm Cloud changed his words, You Nez Perce own too much land. You can’t use all the land, not half of it, not even a tenth of the land. You are a greedy bunch.
The whites called us Nez Perce, although that was not our name. They said it meant Hole through the Nose.
None of our people ever put ornaments in their noses, but when the whites decided something was so, nothing could change their minds.
All of us were angry. We glared at each other. Then the man warned us not to send our warriors to talk to him.
If you do there’ll be trouble,
he said.