For the first time in the two hundred years since Lewis and Clark
led their expedition from St. Louis to the Pacific, we hear the
other side of the story—as we listen to nine descendants of the
Indians whose homelands were traversed.
Among those who speak: Newspaper editor Mark Trahant writes of his
childhood belief that he was descended from Clark and what his own
research uncovers. Award-winning essayist and fiction writer Debra
Magpie Earling describes the tribal ways that helped her
nineteenth-century Salish ancestors survive, and that still work
their magic today. Montana political figure Bill Yellowtail tells
of the efficiency of Indian trade networks, explaining how axes
that the expedition traded for food in the Mandan and Hidatsa
villages of Kansas had already arrived in Nez Perce country by the
time Lewis and Clark got there a few months and 1,000 miles later.
Umatilla tribal leader Roberta Conner compares Lewis and Clark’s
journal entries about her people with what was actually going on,
wittily questioning Clark’s notion that the natives believed the
white men “came from the clouds”—in other words, they were gods.
Writer and artist N. Scott Momaday ends the book with a moving
tribute to the “most difficult of journeys,” calling it, in the
truest sense, for both the men who entered the unknown and those
who watched, “a vision quest,” with the “visions gained being of
profound consequence.”
Some of the essays are based on family stories, some on tribal or
American history, still others on the particular circumstances of a
tribe today—but each reflects the expedition’s impact through the
prism of the author’s own, or the tribe’s, point of view.
Thoughtful, moving, provocative, Lewis and Clark Through Indian
Eyes is an exploration of history—and a study of survival—that
expands our knowledge of our country’s first inhabitants. It also
provides a fascinating and invaluable new perspective on the Lewis
and Clark expedition itself and its place in the long history of
our continent.