Pushing the Bear: A Novel of the Trail of Tears

by Diane Glancy (Cherokee)

Magazine (paper), 1996

LCC

PS3557 L294 P87 1996

Description

Fiction. Literature. In 1838, thirteen thousand Cherokee were forced to leave their homeland in the Southeast and walk 900 miles to present-day Oklahoma. Hunger, cold, fatigue, and disease threatened their very survival. Their grueling relocation trek-the Trail of Tears-takes on new immediacy and meaning with this stunning work of fiction. Maritole loses not only her home and her settled life in North Carolina, but also many of the people closest to her. A chorus of voices joins hers to vividly recreate the tragic story of the Cherokee removal. Amid wrenching scenes of hardship and pain, there is the underlying strength that ultimately allowed this ancient people to endure. Diane Glancy has received many awards for her writing, including the American Book Award and the Pushcart Prize. Her luminous, poetic prose and memorable characters take on added life with this multi-voice performance by talented narrators. An interview with the author is at the conclusion of this audiobook.… (more)

Publication

New York : Harcourt Brace, c1996

Notes

Historical fiction

Awards

Dublin Literary Award (Longlist — 1998)
Minnesota Book Awards (Finalist — Novel — 1997)

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