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The Long Knives Are Crying
A Lakota Western
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Narrated by:
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Joseph M. Marshall III
About this listen
Told for the first time from the Native perspective through the eyes of Lakota warrior Cloud, the story also weaves in the lesser-known but strategically important Battle of the Rosebud and the uncertain future that faced the Lakota following victory. Once again, Marshall infuses the story with his unique voice and eye for detail, creating a page-turning Western with a style of its own.
©2008 Joseph M. Marshall III (P)2009 Blackstone Audio, Inc.Critic reviews
"I found myself brought into the Lakota world; Marshall does a superb job of showing how difficult things were becoming for the Lakota as their land was overtaken and the buffalo herds disappeared." ( Historical Novels Review)
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What listeners say about The Long Knives Are Crying
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- Jory
- 10-13-17
Powerful, beautiful.
The narrator is very good. you will hear how he tells stories which help one come to know humble, subtle personality traits and the beautiful way of life of Lakota and other native nations'.
everyone can learn from them and greatly enrich the lives of those around them and themselves through this knowledge.
i applaud Joeseph Marshall III for what he has done and continues to do. it is an important thing and i am glad for it.
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- Teresa Clark
- 07-14-19
Wonderfully written and told
These stories are crushing my heart. Thank you so much for writing them, they're important
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1 person found this helpful
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- Philip Allen
- 06-18-24
The Long Knives are Crying
Joesph Marshall III, ake another masterpiece a must read for oceti sakowin and human beings alike. Wopidaicicya pedo !!!!
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- ron
- 11-30-11
Best Book on the truth.
This outlines the truth about the lies the US Army used to get public backing and told from both sides and they match. this hands down the best
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5 people found this helpful
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- GeekEndWarrior
- 01-19-19
Jos. Marshall is a Masterfully Erudite Storyteller
Bringing into our lives the very real daily interactions amongst Lakota and Cheyenne individuals, Marshall's voice has a hypnotic cadence as he shares his beautifully rich novel with such easy style that it can put you on horseback alongside some wonderfully human and beloved characters. The foreground characters face with aplomb and an easy grace the life--difficulties and joys--of the people who live in the mid-19th-century horse-culture tribal families. He gives you such insight even into the daily details of the lives of a few generations of Plains Native Americans--specifically Lakota and Cheyenne men, women, and children--that you find yourself living in their presence and wanting to know them, to talk with them, to learn from them about their richly full lives--wanting to befriend them and even to help save their way of life and fight alongside them. I found myself willingly joining in their everyday life-cadence, liking--even loving--some characters; despising others; wanting to scout ahead and warn my friends (the main characters and their kith & kin) of the awful future that's relentless and headed their way.
Even though you know how the story inevitably ends you want to be there with them and, effectively, stop time to save these moments, these lives that give meaning to living--that go so far and so richly beyond mere survival. The characters are animated so beautifully and have such a natural sense of happiness through life's travails and joys that we wax nostalgic for their way of being--one that we moderns have become far too soft and technologically-impaired to find comfortable enough to embrace. I didn't have any difficulty in wanting to live that life, in wishing that I were there beside these people, in missing them as soon as the book ended.
I'll share it with my wife, and with my mother--both avid readers who have a deep affinity for historical fiction. If you find yourself in that company do NOT pass up the chance to live a different life, in a different time, told in a manner that so accurately weaves itself into and through the events of the time of the novel that its effect is one that feels of a time machine.
Marshall is a modern, wonderful, renaissance man: an educator; an author; a historian; a researcher; a linguist (you would never guess that English is not his native tongue;) a craftsman who makes bows and arrows in the traditional Lakota manner (how I would LOVE to be able to find myself the owner of one of his traditionally-crafted ash bows); and also a word-craftsman who is wonderfully adept. He is a delightfully graceful storyteller--one to whom I could listen for DAYS on end. That, I'm thankful for, is an opportunity afforded me because I have all of his available author-voiced books in my Audible library, and hard copies on my desk-bookshelf (as opposed to in the bookcase across the room.) I find myself returning again and again to Marshall's works because they fill a profound need for me in so many ways. Re-reading one of his books is something that I've often indulged, even when I have other NEW and unread books that interest me greatly, because I find myself missing his characters, his storytelling method, and his voice--I find myself missing HIM. I feel as though I'd make a friend in an afternoon were I ever lucky enough to encounter Mr. Marshall in the course of living my life. It's something I look forward to with optimism, but without any real reason--perhaps it betrays how much optimism plays a role in my current consciousness. Perhaps it betrays a shared value system--or parts shared. Perhaps it merely betrays a need to have friends of great intelligence, warmth, kindness, and fierce loyalty, who are gentle without being weak, and sophisticated without losing their earth-connection. Philámayaye mitȟákȟola.
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3 people found this helpful
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- Jeanne W.
- 01-11-23
keep native culture alive
everyone should try to learn about the indigenous people of the land they reside in. if you step outside the box that you're in you may learn something profound.
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- david robinson
- 01-29-23
True history we don’t cancel or forget, and never should we
At 70 years old, I can look back at a time when people acted normal for the morals in the culture of the day. Those who were guided by a Judeo Christian or other written or oral tradition of behavior towards other humans never wavered in their true treatment of another human . Many in the Judeo-Christian group were phonies and hypocrites, but those true believers knew what was right in the eyes of God .
All we see today is a people wanting reparations, cancellation for a minority, but we never hear how the suffering of the indigenous like we do for those that suffered in slavery. However. Unlike black slavery, there is little we hear or do today with the inHumane Way the United States government treated the indigenous people however, no credit is given to the hundreds of thousands of men killed and wounded in the U.S. Civil War FOR Whatever the initial reason the results were a continuing wave for blacks to better themselves and have their lives improved; some have but many have not ! The US GOVERNMENT still cradles them with the governments, money and handouts just like the Lakota were forced to do. It SICKENS me to see one race, creating so much damage, death destruction, disruption, hatred Fomenting more that it never ends if anyone has a complaint with how they were treated it’s the indigenous people .The casinos do nothing, for they never had interest in gold from the black mountains. Neither does money bring back their way of life, the buffalo, family and tribe life and customs. they have remained a lost Minority with the most minimal of coverage and attention and it sickens me to see 13% receive so much in a never ending parade of ugliness that I feel the Lakota and indigenous people would not be capable of displaying even after all the wrongs done to them. I thank Joseph Marshall III For his painstaking clarity and details an undertaking of momentous work.
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- Mike B.
- 04-28-22
Brilliantly narration.
Sad that the book ended and even more sad that the way of life for the Lakota people came to an end as well. The holding back of European expansion would be as easy as holding back the tide of the ocean.
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- Drake Murphy
- 01-18-23
Insightful History
After listening to many western expansion historical books, I find the stories overlap and corroborate each others accounts. The oral tradition of stories passed down seems to be quite accurate.
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- Kindle Customer
- 07-03-24
Great story telling!
Story telling at it's highest level, I will be seeking out more from this master storyteller. He sets an unbelievably high bar for those writing, and speaking about indigionus peoples
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