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Hardcover The Callings Book

ISBN: 0896724948

ISBN13: 9780896724945

The Callings

The South Plains, 1873 Bison herds are dwindling on the Kansas prairie. Logan Fletcher, a young faith healer from Kentucky, labors as a skinner on a buffalo hunting crew, waiting for the taming of the plains and the chance to spread the Word to the coming immigrants. On the reservation near Fort Sill, the U.S. Government withholds food in retaliation for Comanche and Kiowa depredation in Texas. Cuts Something, an aging Comanche war chief, returns...

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: New

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A moving story

Mr. Chappell creates a world with vivid scenery, well developed characters and razor-sharp prose that cuts to the heart of the story like a well honed knife. I could smell the buffalo. This is a great read.

a well told historical story of a period of time in the west

I like the west, and I like reading about the history of the west. Who settled it, why, what they saw/found, and why they wanted to protect it from the other side. This book takes you through a period in the development of the west on horseback, on foot, on a wagon, and paints a vivid, realistic picture of the land and the opposing people who wanted to keep it or claim it.Rarely is the reader allowed to determine who is right/wrong or who wins/loses in the struggle for ownership of the west by two opposing sides, both committed to their cause and belief in the rightousness of their convictions. The characters are well developed and you can almost see the dust on their clothes, the sweat on their brow, and identify with the motives of each of them. I enjoyed this well researched story and it is obvious that Mr. Chappell has put some boot leather on the ground in the west as evidenced by his very vivid descriptions of the plant and geological aspects of the region. Highly recommended.

The Callings - A Great Story on Real Life Struggles

"The Callings" is a great read!!! I couldn't put it down. I recommend it to anyone that loves a well written story, westerns, or historical fiction. This is a compelling story that plunges the reader into timeless personal struggles between main characters while capturing the real struggles between two cultures on the Great Plains in 1873.It gave me a historical perspective from both the Comanche and the buffalo hunters that is realistic and truthful. I wasn't sure which side should prevail at the end of the story which is a fresh viewpoint in our politically correct world of today.

Great story!!!

This is a great story told without ethnic bias. The author helps us understand the cultural differences that led to the near extinction of the bison as well as the native peoples that depended upon them. The author does not take sides but presents the differences through the eyes of his characters via a well told tale that will keep you reading past bed time.

VIVID-STUNNING-LYRICALLY BEAUTIFUL

The year--1873. The place--the LLano Estacado (The Staked Plains) and the vast surrounding grasslands of the Texas Panhandle. Bison still roam in ocean-like herds that attract white hunters and the freedom seeking Indians who hate them. Henry Chappell's lyrically beautiful new novel sets these two groups on a collision course destined from the first word to end in unexpected ways for everyone involved.Cuts Something, an aging Comanche war chief, longs for the glory days of the past and leads his small, starving band away from the reservation near Fort Sill. His broken heart yearns for the valleys of the Pease River, the unchanging reminder of better times now lost forever. Logan Fletcher, a young buffalo skinner from Kentucky, flounders into the same area on the heels of a promise made to his dying father. A promise of redemption and healing from the hands of a true believer.Surrounding these two men are a grand cast of characters the reader cannot soon forget. Cuts Something's wife, She Invites Her Sisters, his son Elk Rub, his close friends Thats It and Otter Belt bring the Comanches to brutal life. Chappel's Comanches are fiercly realistic, but so carefully drawn as to make their murderous behavior understandable and almost sympathetic.Equally understandable is the destructive behavior of Fletcher's band of acquaintances. Bob Durham, a former slave, whose skill on the plains is even sought after by the U.S. Army. Ezra Higginbotham, a hunter determined to exterminate the entire buffalo population. These three end up in the company of rescued white women and Army pursuers led by Tonkawa scouts who hate Comanches and practice a form of cannibalism when given the opportunity.Chappell's story does not turn away from the cruelty or racism of either group. In the end he offers the discriminating reader no pat answers or sharply drawn politically correct conclusions for what happens between them. Others have attempted what Mr. Chappell succeeds in doing. Most have fallen woefull short with stupendous loads of pretentious literary fluff. No pretentions here. Straight from the shoulder--damned good stuff--don't misss it! Other writers should be green with envy.
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