It is the spring of 1860, and a battle for power looms on the horizon. Within the high plains of the Llano Estacado, a fifteen-year-old Comanche woman pesters her powerful aunt with taboo questions about how to gain spirit power. Pohoi knows a time of ter
J. L. Chalfant is a Texas native. She holds a master's degree in education, owns a working art studio and is trained in outdoor skills. She lives in Arkansas, in the country, with her husband, dogs, and cats.
My knowledge of Native American mindset comes only from reading Sherman Alexie, a brief study of the Apache language in a college linguistics course, and the movie "Little Big Man," so I can't attest to this novel's cultural accuracy. But considering the narrative details of Comanche life and belief magic, the dialogue, and the descriptive settings, I would say Chalfant knows something of what she writes, either from experience or extensive research. This is a good piece of writing - a captivating story well-told. It was especially nice to find a strong, young female character that isn't a vampire or living in some dystopian world.
Pohoi and Comanche Spirit Power by J.L. Chalfant is a good story. I admired the authors dedication to tradition. There were tons of thing happening all at once in this story line. It just never pulled me in, took forever to read.