The Blue Tattoo, The Life of Olive Oatman, by Margot Mifflin


The Blue Tattoo, The Life of Olive Oatman
Margot Mifflin


When I first picked this up at a rummage sale, it looked interesting, but I thought it was historical fiction. However, it's an accurate gathering of information and the history of Olive Oatman.

Olive was a young girl whose family was from a Brewsterite family of pioneers (a branch of Mormonism), they were seeking a "promised land" out west. They branched off from the party they were traveling with, and were attacked by Yavapai Indians. All of them were massacred except for Olive, a younger sister, and a brother. Olive and her sister were taken by the Yavapais as slaves, and the brother was left for dead, and later came to, and found his way to some friendly natives who nursed him back to health.

The girls lived as slaves with the Yavapais for a year and were then sold to the Mohave Indians, and that tribe welcomed them in as family. They were well taken care of, and inducted into the tribe with tattoos on their chins. 

They were happy with the Mohaves, and had assimilated. They expected to spend the rest of their lives with them, and loved their Mohave family. A time of famine came, and the younger sister, who was fragile, died.

All this time, a search had gone on for the missing Oatman girls, and when word came that they could be with the Mohaves, steps were taken to get them back. Threats were made to the Mohave tribe, and so they gave Olive back to the white men, even though she did not want to leave.

She then had to re-learn the English language and white man's way of life, grieving and mourning the loss of here Mohave family.

Eventually a preacher heard of her story and wrote it down, embellishing it, making the Mohaves out to be heartless savages, romanticizing her ordeal. He had it published, and it became a sensation. Olive became a public speaker, but instead of telling it how it was, she was coerced into telling the romanticized version. She pretty much betrayed her Mohave family out of fear of being an "Indian lover"

This book discusses the historical events of the Oatman ordeal and the surrounding circles, and also discusses the discrepancies in the book that was written, along with how her story has influenced books and media. It also follows her life from birth to death.

I really enjoyed this book, a fascinating glance into a life that I had never heard about before. I highly recommend it.


Would you like to buy me a book, or help keep my little free library stocked and maintained? You can donate here: paypal.me/AmyVanGaasbeck 


 

Thunder from Jerusalem, Bodie and Brock Thoene


 Thunder from Jerusalem, Bodie and Brock Thoene

This is the second book in the Zion Legacy series, this is based in the era immediately after World War 2 when many Jews chose to go back to Israel when Israel became a nation, and the terrible battles that were fought there in the midst of those decisions.

This is a good series but I do have a hard time reading it, it feels like there are so many different characters and sub stories it's a little hard for me to track sometimes. However, I do learn history better if it is told in story format, so it has been good for me to read this and understand at least a glimpse into what life was like in post-war Israel and how the war did not end for them with the end of WWII.

Would you like to buy me a book, or help keep my little free library stocked and maintained? You can donate here: paypal.me/AmyVanGaasbeck 

Out of Africa by Isak Dinesen


Out of Africa, by Isak Dinesen

Out of Africa is a memoir by Baroness Karen Dinesen Blixen, who ran a coffee plantation outside of Nairobi, Kenya, for 17 years in the early 20th century when Kenya was still a British colony. She tells anecdotes of the squatters who lived on her plantation, her servants, and her friends and colleagues. 

I greatly enjoyed reading this book, as so much of it reminded me of the people and culture of Kenya both times that I visited there. Yes, things have changed quite a bit since the early 1900s. Nairobi is a very large city and has giant slums full of poor people, it has skyscrapers, all kinds of farming, but the people are in many ways the same. 

I felt like the author had a gentle and great love for the people of Africa, as well as the land. 

I watched the movie after reading the book. Glen Close played the Baroness, and Robert Redford played Denys Finch-Hatton, her close friend or so I thought until I saw the movie, and learned he was her lover. It was modestly hinted at in the book, so I looked her up on Google, and interestingly enough, he was her lover, after divorcing her husband who married her mainly for convenience. 

The movie was a bit different from the book, no surprise at that---but the movie, I feel was based half on her book, and half on the events of her life that were recorded in history but not recorded by her in her book. It is well worth watching, but I would read the book and read a little more about her before watching the movie, for a greater appreciation of it.


 

Memory Makers Family Scrapbooks Yesterday, Today, & Tomorrow

Family Scrapbooks Yesterday, Today, & Tomorrow, by Memory Makers


I discovered scrapbooking after the birth of my second child. I attended a Stampin/ Up! home party, and learned all the ways that rubber stamps could be used, and used for scrapbooking. Then I discovered Creative Keepsakes scrapbooking magazines, and craft/scrapbooking stores. I went crazy. For a while I was scrapbooking 1-2 detailed pages a day. Then I had my third child, and suddenly just didn't have time anymore. I kept all my supplies thinking I would get back into it but never did. Then when the kids were older, I found another outlet for my creativity, and went to art college and earned a degree in fine art, painting and drawing. 

I still want to get back into scrapbooking, though.

I picked this book up at a yard sale not too long ago. It has a lot of great ideas and beautiful photos perfect for inspiring someone like me who needs to get back into it. So I plan to keep this and put it with the rest of my scrapbooking stuff, and maybe one day soon I will get it all out and make a page. I have lots of ideas swirling around in my head. We will see.





 

Firefly Lane, Kristin Hannah

Firefly Lane, Kristin Hannah My daughter has been telling me that she has heard so many good things about the author Kristin Hannah and her ...