Losing St Christopher

In 1953 Albert Speer, Germany’s Minister of Armaments & War Production during World War II, wrote from his cell in Spandau Prison, West Berlin, regarding the genocide of the American Indian. The Nazis’ study of the treatment and eradication of the American Indian was an element in the plan for the “Final Solution” – the eradication of European Jews and others deemed undesirable or a threat to the Aryan order. Hitler, Heinrich Himmler, Adolf Eichmann, and others who administered the Nazi Holocaust had looked to the Indian Removal Act of 1830 and the subsequent actions of the United States Government as the blueprint for annihilation of a people, a culture, and a way of life.

Losing St ChristopherIn Losing St. Christopher, Totsuhwa, the revered shaman of the Cherokee Nation, struggles against the assimilation of his people into the white world of men he sees as invaders. The colonists, along with Cherokee who are trying to bridge both worlds, see him as a barbarous threat. When Totsuhwa’s visions show him the outcome, it is as black as his deep set haunting eyes. Chancellor, his son, takes a white wife following study at a missionary school and the shaman’s fears seem realized. Conflicts between cultures and within the family erupt when Totsuhwa’s only grandchild is forced onto the Trail of Tears. In the chase that follows, an estranged love fights to stem the ugly flow of racism that is moving in two directions.

“History is written by the victorious, but when almost forgotten historical characters are brought to life, and their stories told, they are preserved through the ages, and in this preservation David-Michael Harding has succeeded.”
– Principal Chief Bill John Baker,
Cherokee Nation, Tahlequah, OK
(From Amazon.com)

 

David-Michael Harding

David-Michael Harding

Biography: David-Michael Harding is a lifelong writer whose prior novel, How Angels Die, received critical and commercial acclaim. A former semi-professional football player, his writing is hard hitting and passionate. He holds a Master’s Degree in Education and is an adjunct professor of writing. His respect and admiration of the Native American culture inspired this novel.

Harding is a life-long writer whose work has appeared in national publications and has been recognized by the international writing community. He is a collegiate writing instructor and former semi-professional football player. His experiences provide readers with well researched, crushing fast-paced action. Most of his days are spent writing from the cockpit of his sailboat, Pegasus, somewhere off the Nature Coast of Florida in the Gulf of Mexico. (From Amazon.com)

5Stars“Epic” is not a word I use frequently or carelessly. However, after reading Losing St. Christopher, it’s the word that immediately leaps to mind. David-Michael Harding has woven a compassionate and compelling story of the inexcusable and contemptible treatment of the Principal People by the European settlers of North America.

Harding has managed to carefully present both sides of the conflict while telling a very well-developed story of the ill-fated attempts of the Cherokee people as they resist the insatiable appetite of the settlers for land and resources. Despite all attempts to assimilate and embrace the “white ways” in an attempt to live peacefully with their new and unwelcome neighbors they are the recipients of lies, broken promises, and constant encroachment.

The true and well researched history of the displacement of the Principal People is woven into the fictional story and equal treatment is given to the settlers who resisted the unstoppable offensive.

Losing St Christopher, like the first book in the series, Cherokee Talisman is difficult to put down. It’s even more difficult to stop thinking about the shameful history of our nation. I would very much like to see this series on the list of required reading in every school in America. While it is too late to rectify what was done, we should never, ever forget the atrocities of our ancestors.

In the interest of full disclosure I should mention that the book was given to me by the author in return for an honest review.

Losing St Christopher is available at Amazon and I give it my unreserved recommendation to all readers, both young and old.

About Ol' Big Jim

Ol' Big Jim, has been a storekeeper, an embalmer, a hospital orderly, a medical biller, and through it all, a teller of tall tales. Many of his stories, like his first book, New Yesterdays, are set in his hometown of Piedmont, Alabama. For seven years, he lived in the oldest continuously inhabited city in the world, Amman, Jordan where he spends his time trying to visit each one of the thousands of Ammani coffee shops and scribbling in his ever-present notebook. These days, you can find him back stateside, still filling notebooks.
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1 Response to Losing St Christopher

  1. Norma Wright says:

    This sounds like it would be a good book.

    Like

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