"Manitou
Spring author Mary Finley's White
Grizzly is a historical fiction targeted toward
the young reader age 10 and above, but it is a jolly
good read for almost anyone. Julio, a lad of 15, is
journeying from New Mexico to Colorado to Missouri to
find his ancestry. Born of white parents, adopted by
Mexicans, befriended by Cheyenne Indians, he finds himself
torn between three worlds. At Bent's Fort in Colorado
he meets and travels east on the Santa Fe Trail to Kansas
Landing in Missouri with William Bent, herding Bent's
sheep in return for being able to accompany the wagons.
Along the way, there are many adventures, including
an encounter with a grizzly bear and a kidnapping by
Pawnees.
Like
William Bent, there are other "real" characters
in this story such as the slave couple that befriends
Julio, Dick and Charlotte Green, as well as a pair of
unsavory characters, Christopher and Gallatin Searcy.
The politics are real as well. In 1845, war between
the United States and Mexico was threatening. Slavery
divided the United States and would eventually lead
to the Civil War. The places that Julio visits can still
be located today. The author not only grew up near Bent's
Fort but also followed the Santa Fe Trail in researching
this book.
In
order to distinguish between what is fact and what is
fiction, Finley includes an appendix at the end of the
book entitled, "What's Fact? What's Fiction?"
She refers to specific pages and discusses places, events
and characters that have a basis in fact. There is also
a glossary in which Spanish and Indian words and expressions
are defined. There is a lot to learn in the book and
it is presented with skill and care. It is a true page-turner."