Showing posts with label The Plainsmen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Plainsmen. Show all posts

Saturday, 21 January 2023

ASHES OF HEAVEN


THE PLAINSMEN
Number 13 of 16
By Terry C. Johnston
St. Martin’s Paperbacks, May 1998

They came from the fires of the Civil War, from the rolling hills of the Eastern states, and some from out of the West’s rugged mountains. For two decades they fought for an open land, and earned the name The Plainsmen.

The U.S. Army’s goal: wipe out the remnants of scattered starving people on the frontier’s Northern Plain. But before Colonel Nelson A. Miles, the Bear Coat, launched his Spring campaign into the heart of Indian country, the commander took one last stab at negotiations – and called on a Cheyenne woman and the famous half-breed pony scout named Johnny Bruguier. Together, they travelled to the valley of the upper Rosebud River to urge the Sioux to surrender. But a personal grudge exploded in the ranks of the U.S. Army. Now, as a man and a woman risk their lives for peace, the culmination of the great Sioux War is set in motion, as the Bear Coat takes on the last of the fierce Lakota warriors…

This series is billed as historical fiction, and reading these books certainly makes you admire the amount of time Terry C. Johnston put into researching his novels. They are packed with historical detail and most of the characters are real people. There are a handful of fictional characters, and in this book, we get Seamus Donegan, his wife Samantha and their son Colin Teig – the latter being extremely young and this book features his christening. Seamus is Johnston’s linking character in most of the Plainsmen books.

The vast majority of this book deals with peace talks as Miles tries to convince the Indians to lay down their arms and surrender. The various bands of Indians discussing their options means a lot of the story is told through them. Their conversations are fascinating, but also became a little tedious as the author includes so many different bands of Indians having almost the same deliberations, with pretty much the same outcome. 

Johnston starts many of the chapters with historical telegraph messages telling of events happening in the West, mainly to do with the attempts to get the Indians to surrender, but also includes other interesting news such as what was happening in Deadwood. These notes help give a period flavour to the book.

Johnston adds many footnotes at the bottom of a lot of pages that explain the meaning of Indian terms and names, along with notes as to which Plainsmen books earlier events can be found in. In fact, there is quite of lot of past reflection in the story as both Indian and white men remember previous battles and struggles.

It takes around three hundred pages before we get to the Lame Deer Fight which took place on May 7th, 1877 which marked the end of the Great Sioux War. I’ve always thought Johnston described his battles in excellent prose and the Lame Deer Fight certainly fits with my belief. The descriptions of panic, fear, bravery and cowardly acts, are grippingly told and you can clearly visualize the horrors of combat. 

If you’ve been reading this series, this book is certainly one not to miss as it does draw some kind of conclusion to the Sioux War that has been taking place over the entire series so far. 

One observation I will add, is that the book contains maps and lists of characters at the beginning. I’d advise against reading the character lists as they highlight those who die, both Indian and white man, and could spoil some of the tense life and death scenes if you have no prior knowledge as to who lived or died. I’ve always wondered why such list aren’t added to the end of the book rather than the beginning. 

If you have an interest in true events, in this case the struggles between white man and Indian, then I can’t recommend this series enough.

Wednesday, 13 August 2008

Wolf Mountain Moon

 by Terry C. Johnston
Bantam, February 1997

This is the twelfth book in The Plainsmen series.

Four hundred and forty pages of quite small print make this book a long read. The Plainsmen books are billed as historical novels. Wolf Mountain Moon covers two lesser-known battles during one of the worst winters of the time. These are the Ash Creek Fight - Baldwin against Sitting Bull, and The Battle of the Butte - Miles against Crazy Horse.

During the Ash Creek confrontation Johnston’s fictional character, scout Seamus Donegan is riding with a message for Colonel Miles so he doesn't have a major role to play in the first part of the book. Miles asks Donegan to stay and help in his relentless pursuit of Crazy Horse and Donegan does so, even though he was intending to go home and see his wife and newborn son. I found the chapter dealing with Samantha Donegan’s lonely Christmas very moving, perhaps more so than the outcome of the battles with the Sioux/Cheyenne confederations.

As this series progresses it seems Johnston was able to uncover more and more facts and seemed intent on cramming them all into the book, while fascinating stuff, they do tend to overwhelm the story occasionally. Yes these newspaper reports are supposed to add flavour but at times I felt them getting in the way. Johnston’s descriptions of the conditions the soldiers find themselves in is well told and his writing of the battles very well done. Miles determination to bring an end to the Indian Wars comes across strongly; he will be the man to bring an end to Crazy Horse where others have failed. Although not known at the time the Battle of the Butte will be Crazy Horse’s last fight with the white man’s army.

If you’re interested in the history of the Indian Wars then I doubt you could find a much better series to read, and I think it’s a shame that Johnston died before he could complete the series. (#16, a 700+ page novel, being the last).

The final chapter of Crazy Horse’s life will be told in a later book.

Definitely not a quick read, or a book to provided light entertainment. A book that plods a little at times and could have, in my mind, benefited from being a little shorter. But still is a fascinating and absorbing read.