The Daughter of the Sioux
Charles King
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
Charles King was a United States soldier and a distinguished writer. He was the son of Civil War general Rufus King and great grandson of Rufus King, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. He graduated from West point in 1866 and served in the Army during the Indian Wars under George Crook. He was wounded in the arm forcing his retirement from the regular army. During this time he became acquainted with Buffalo Bill Cody. King would later write scripts for several of Cody's silent films.
King's writings, relating to American Indians, cover a complex range of opinion within his novels. His sympathy for their cause of defending their homelands, and being forced to adopt a new lifestyle, did not stop him from graphically portraying them as savage and barbaric peoples. However, King also used his writings to harshly criticize U.S. government policies that resulted in Indian treaties not being honored and that permitted rampant corruption among government-appointed reservation agents. As a lieutenant in the 5th Cavalry, King was a participant on the American western frontier, who personally fought in battles with Southwestern and Plains Indians and observed government policies first hand. Charles King is credited today with helping to establish the "Western novel" as a romantic and dramatic genre of American literature, based upon a sturdy foundation of historical realism. (Summary compiled from Wikipedia and THE LIFE OF CHARLES KING
by Nathan Bender, Housel Curator, McCracken Research Library within The Buffalo Bill Historical Center.) (7 hr 52 min)
Chapters
Foreshadowed Events | 26:48 | Read by Maire Rhode |
Absent From Duty | 20:26 | Read by Maire Rhode |
A Night Encounter | 16:49 | Read by Shirley Anderson |
The Sign Of The Bar Shoe | 15:12 | Read by Christine Blachford |
A Grave Discovery | 17:37 | Read by Shirley Anderson |
First Sight Of The Foe | 19:21 | Read by texttalker |
Blood Will Tell | 18:55 | Read by texttalker |
More Strange Discoveries | 18:00 | Read by texttalker |
Bad News From The Front | 12:30 | Read by Christine Blachford |
"I'll never go back" | 18:18 | Read by John W. Michaels |
A Fight With A Fury | 13:27 | Read by Christine Blachford |
The Ordeal By Fire | 22:23 | Read by John W. Michaels |
Wounded--Body And Soul | 18:22 | Read by John W. Michaels |
A Vanished Heroine | 18:11 | Read by John W. Michaels |
A Woman's Plot | 26:10 | Read by Maire Rhode |
Night Prowling At Frayne | 24:22 | Read by Maire Rhode |
A Rifled Desk | 14:36 | Read by Christine Blachford |
Burglary At Blake's | 16:08 | Read by Christine Blachford |
A Slap For The Major | 20:49 | Read by John W. Michaels |
The Sioux Surrounded | 21:51 | Read by John W. Michaels |
Thanksgiving At Frayne | 22:15 | Read by John W. Michaels |
Behind The Bars | 18:35 | Read by texttalker |
A Soldier Entangled | 19:29 | Read by Jim Fish |
The Death Song Of The Sioux | 22:36 | Read by Maire Rhode |
L'envoi - Epilogue | 9:26 | Read by Varra Unreal |
Reviews
Great Story
Jpassservais
It is hard to believe that there were so few good books written about our great American West. However it may be due simply to my ignorance and there may be many more of which I am unaware. There are certainly, I am sure, many stories to be or that could be told about this topic which are either hidden in the graves of those who lived them or are written and I am ignorant as to where they are. I have not looked hard enough, though, to comment but as I see only a few more than 80 western books and so many others from other countries (which, I enjoy immensely as well) I believe there must be more somewhere and I will continue to search for them because I do enjoy this part of our American story. The readers all did a good job and as I have said the story is very well written and I would recommend it to those who are interested in this subject as I am. God Bless Librivox!
Interesting Story
mnels
I found this story quite interesting. However, some of the readers were very hard to understand.
Daughter
Chalood
The story suffers from to many a variety of readers.