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Monday, November 7, 2011

Frontier fiction for Children: William O. Steele

By Lori Benton

I've made a happy reading discovery. His name is William O. Steele (1917-1979). He was the award-winning author of historical fiction for children written in the 1950s, 60s, and 70s. Particularly fiction set on the 18th century frontier of Tennessee. That's why I've just discovered him, because I'm writing a novel set on the eastern Tennessee frontier in the latter quarter of the 18th century, and it's always part of my research process to scour my local library and Amazon for novels set in the time period and setting I'm writing about, both for inspiration, a broader view of time and place, and to be sure I'm not writing a book that's already been written!

Thus it happened that I found William Steele, and his book The Man with the Silver Eyes.

"Talatu (which means "the Cricket" in the language of the Cherokee) has spent his young life hating the whites, who have taken his people's land and driven them deep into the wilderness. He is stunned when his beloved great-uncle tells him he must accompany Shinn, a white man with the palest eyes Talatu has ever seen, to the settlement of Watauga, where he is to spend a year with him. Autumn becomes winter as Talatu continues to despise the white Quaker who attempts to live in peace with his frontier neighbors, and he dreams of joining his warrior uncles in attacks on the white settlers.

Set against the backdrop of the raging Revolution and the tensions of frontier living in 1780, William O. Steele has written a memorable story about an encounter between a young Cherokee boy and a white Quaker trader culminating in a confrontation that transforms Talatu from a sullen and suspicious boy into a resolute and courageous man."

~ from the book's jacket flap

Child-me would have adored this story back in 1976, when it was published. She would have gone on to devour every book this man wrote. It was in 1978, after all, that I wrote my first story about a Lakota girl called Yellow Feather, and the wounded mustang she nursed back to health, tamed, and rode in a race to win a prize. I do wish I'd discovered him back in the 1970s when the first stirrings of this frontier fiction lover's wee heart were being fed over and over and over again by the Little House books (always wishing Laura would run off to visit the Indians her Ma so feared).

Grown-up-me is still hungry for books like The Man with the Silver Eyes, in which characters from different frontier races, or those caught between races, overcome monumental differences in culture and world view to find the common ground of friendship. Better late than never, I say, to have found Mr. Steele's books. And with titles like the following listed on this book's "by the same author" page, I will be spending many enjoyable hours visiting Mr. Steele's frontier world.

The Buffalo Knife
Wilderness Journey
Winter Danger
Tomahawks and Trouble
Davy Crockett's Earthquake
The Lone Hunt
Flaming Arrows
Daniel Boone's Echo
Andy Jackson's Water Well
The Far Frontier
The Year of the Bloody Sevens
The No-Name Man of the Mountain
Trail Through Danger
The Old Wilderness Road

The Man With The Silver Eyes at Amazon

5 comments:

  1. Update: I've since read several other titles from Steele's list and can recommend each one of them too.

    Winter Danger
    Flaming Arrows

    And two that don't appear on the list:

    Wayah of the Real People, the story of one Cherokee boy who becomes a pupil at the College of William and Mary, in the mid 1700s. Having just listened to an audio version of Caleb's Crossing, by Geraldine Brooks (a similar story set in New England), I found "Wayah" to be just as insightful while being much more hopeful.

    Tomahawk Border, set in the early 1700s, about a young teen learning to be a ranger out of a frontier fort, and his clumsy, often hilarious mishaps, before circumstances force him to become a man his fellow rangers can depend on.

    I'm looking forward to more of Steele's books. What a treasure!

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  2. Love the titles, Lori! Steele is a treasure! I wish there were more books like his. I remember how excited I was when I discovered Eric Sloane. I'm going to do a post on him here, too, hopefully soon. He inspires me more than anyone I know and I'm so glad he was prolific like Steele. Thanks for sharing this resource. I'd love to have his whole library!

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  3. Thanks for this post, Lori! Looking forward to reading some of these to my son. Blessings!

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  4. Laura, I'll look forward to that post on Eric Sloane.

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  5. What great adventure stories. Child-me and adult-me would love these!

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