Humphrey’s historical novel observes life from the Cherokee perspective.
The year is 1780. Enoli, a Cherokee of the Paint Clan, lives in a region that will become modern-day Georgia. He’s only 10 years old when his mother dies from smallpox, a disease that spreads quickly and against which traditional healing methods seem to have little effect. Enoli finds that he has a calling to be a healer; he can also communicate with a squirrel named Saloli. Making an enemy of the shaman Mohi, who attended to his mother in her final days, he comes under the tutelage of a more capable healer named Son of Stone Cloud. Enoli enters a five-year apprenticeship with Son of Stone Cloud, who teaches Enoli (who will later be called Dideyohvsgi once his apprenticeship is completed) a rudimentary type of inoculation against smallpox. Disease is not the only challenge the Cherokee and other native people face; they also face constant conflict with settlers who keep pushing westward. Despite peace agreements such as the Treaty of Hopewell, the violence is immense. The narrative moves briskly while establishing the tinderbox that is Enoli’s environment. Those who seek peace with the settlers wind up betrayed; those who seek war wind up killing innocent people and perpetuating more violence. The mixture of differing personalities and opinions on the Cherokee side helps to paint a nuanced picture. Straightforward prose moves the story along, but the characters tend to speak in simple dialogue that can make distinguishing one character from another difficult. (They tend to say plain things like “What do you think they’re doing?” and “What a disappointment!”) Nevertheless, the story keeps readers invested; the time and place depicted in the story is dangerous for all involved.
A studied look at the deadly challenges facing Indigenous people in 18th-century America.