Boy Made of Dawn, R. Allen Chappell
Boy Made of Dawn, R. Allen Chappell
List: $13.99 | Sale: $9.80
Club: $6.99

Boy Made of Dawn

Author: R. Allen Chappell

Narrator: Kaipo Schwab

Unabridged: 4 hr 16 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 03/15/2016


Synopsis



In this fast-paced sequel to the highly acclaimed Navajo Autumn, Charlie Yazzie and Thomas Begay encounter danger and intrigue on the nation's largest Indian reservation. Old and new characters emerge to unravel ongoing corruption in the upcoming Patsy Greyhorse murder trials, and an irascible Ute family and their shrewd ranch-woman neighbor become caught up in the plot to place certain tribal leaders above the law.

About R. Allen Chappell

R. Allen Chappell, the author of thirteen novels and a collection of short stories, grew up with the Navajo, went to school with and later worked alongside-forging enduring friendships along the way. "Those friendships," the author recalls, "became the inspiration for this series." As in life, the people age and change as they grow older, and reservation culture itself evolves.
Chappell notes, "My writing focuses on the people of the Four Corners region past and present. I tend not to romanticize my characters, preferring instead to paint them as I find them. They have much the same qualities, good and bad, as the rest of us."

At home in Western Colorado, Chappell continues to pursue a lifelong interest in the prehistory of the Four Corners region and its people. Though his books are works of fiction, a concerted effort is made to maintain the accuracy of the culture and people as he has come to know them.


Reviews

I really like this author; this is the second book that I've read by him, and I plan to read all of his work. It reminds me quite a bit of Tony Hillerman's work. Boy Made of Dawn in the second book in a series of mysteries that take place in the Navajo Nation. The stories are well thought out and de......more

Goodreads review by Dan

good Navajo read This book gives a good feeling of the Navajo ways and cultures. It takes me back in many ways to my childhood on the reservation.......more