Lynda C. (Readnmachine) reviewed on + 1474 more book reviews
Lucia St. Clair Robsons specialty is historical fiction utilizing as main characters Native American women whose family ties place them near people and events of importance, and she does it well. Walk in My Soul tells the story of the Cherokee Removal, first from their ancestral lands and then from a succession of treaty lands given to them by the American government, only to be claimed by ever advancing white settlers. Used as political pawns, betrayed time and time again, the Cherokees' removal, culminating in the infamous Trail of Tears in 1838, is a grim story of greed and brutality. Robson has a tougher time making Sam Houston, who lived for a time among the Cherokee and married the books' main character, medicine woman Tiana Rodgers, into a heroic figure. Houston by all accounts was a hard drinking, politically savvy man who frequently took the main chance for himself in his long career, from serving under Andrew Jackson during the War of 1812 to being largely responsible for the disaster at the Alamo. Its an uphill battle to make him the object of Tianas abiding love, and if Robson fails in this it is because she could not alter Houstons role in history for the convenience of an epic love story.
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