Originally published Thursday, April 2, 2009 at 12:00 AM
Comments (0)
E-mail article
Print
Share
Book review
"The Color of Lightning:" Terror in the 19th Century West
Novelist Paulette Jiles' "The Color of Lightning," a harrowing tale of conflicts between settlers and Native Americans in 19th century Texas, is based on the true story of an African-American man known for his ability to bargain with Indians for the lives of kidnapped captives.
Special to The Seattle Times
"The Color of Lightning"
by Paulette Jiles
Morrow, 349 pp., $25.99
It is 1863, and Britt Johnson saddles up with a few other men from his North Texas settlement to ride to a nearby town for supplies. Johnson, a free African American, has brought his beautiful wife and three small children to this desolate, dangerous country to build a life he hopes will be freer of racism than it would have been in Kentucky. While he is gone, a war party of 700 Comanche and Kiowa descend into the valley, killing the men and kidnapping women and children. His wife and two younger children are taken as captives.
So begins "The Color of Lightning," Paulette Jiles' harrowing and gripping new novel about the tragic, stunningly violent conflicts between the settlers of America's West and the Native Americans who already lived there. Based on the true story of an African American who was legendary for his ability to bargain with Native Americans for the return of captives, the novel also tells the fictional tale of a well-meaning, but naive young Quaker from Philadelphia, Samuel Hammond, who is sent to run a regional Bureau of Indian Affairs. The contrast between Johnson, a pragmatic man of action, and Hammond, an idealist who struggles with the ambiguities of reality, echoes the history of a period when government programs and westward expansion collided, ruinously, with Native cultures.
Jiles' spare and melancholy prose is the perfect language for this tale in which survival necessitates brutality. She is also an equal-opportunity storyteller, describing events from the point of view of settlers and Native Americans. Her descriptions of life in the Native-American camps are some of the most compelling sections of the book.
Copyright © 2009 The Seattle Times Company
NEW - 10:24 AM
Shelf Talk | Medical Lectures + medical info: at your public library!
Gordon, Egan among PEN/Faulkner award nominees
Comics: Flaws aside, animated 'All-Star Superman' still fun
Case closed: Dick Tracy artist retires

- Beer-drinking bridge builders will get training from a counselor
- Get a sitter — please — for these 10 great date-night restaurants | All You Can Eat
- SPU surprises neighbors with sale of Queen Anne rec property
- Time for Mariners to waive Chone Figgins, play the kids | Steve Kelley
- Kevin Millwood's six scoreless innings, Alex Liddi's grand slam add up to 5-3 Mariners victory
- Boy's pat on president's head captured for history
- Details released on family found dead in Oregon
- Police arrest New Jersey man who confessed to killing Etan Patz
- Investigation: Seattle principal didn't violate policy in handling alleged sexual incident
- Bungie, Xbox 720 and PS4 plans revealed in lawsuit | Brier Dudley's Blog
- NAACP returns to relevance by backing same-sex marriage
357 - Mariners try to extend some other team's misery for a change
335 - Quit drinking beer on job, Highway 520 builders told
314 - SPU surprises neighbors with sale of Queen Anne rec property
244 - Traffic study gives arena a green light; critics see red
212 - Protesters rally outside Amazon annual meeting
163 - Romney slams Obama, teachers unions
142 - Mariners avoid making Chone Figgins call, but can't keep doing nothing with him
122 - White House puts the Supreme Court on trial over health-care law
97 - Swing states' economic rebounds brighten Obama's prospects
78
- Get a sitter — please — for these 10 great date-night restaurants | All You Can Eat
- Dig into colorful history at Oregon's John Day Fossil Beds
- Recipe: Brown Butter Asparagus Risotto
- Beer-drinking bridge builders will get training from a counselor
- SPU surprises neighbors with sale of Queen Anne rec property
- In Congress, talking like a 12th-grade student makes you a brainiac | Danny Westneat
- Zumiez rebounds from recession better than most
- Recipe: Grilled Curried Chicken With Mango Salsa
- Cutters Crabhouse happy hour presents a grand view, deep-fried Beecher's curds
- Gates Foundation grants give local groups a boost
