From rec.arts.sf.written Wed Apr 19 13:51:13 1995 Path: news.ifm.liu.se!liuida!sunic!sunic.sunet.se!trane.uninett.no!Norway.EU.net!EU.net!news.sprintlink.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!boulder!ucsub.Colorado.EDU!brock From: brock@ucsub.Colorado.EDU (Steve Brock) Newsgroups: rec.arts.books.reviews,rec.arts.books,alt.books.reviews,rec.arts.mystery,alt.native,soc.culture.native,rec.arts.books.hist-fiction,rec.arts.sf.written Subject: Review of The Tree People by Stokes (fiction, mystery, Nat. Am.) Followup-To: rec.arts.books,alt.native Date: 18 Apr 1995 01:48:37 GMT Organization: University of Colorado, Boulder Lines: 29 Approved: brock@colorado.edu Message-ID: <3mv5pl$fdn@CUBoulder.Colorado.EDU> NNTP-Posting-Host: ucsub.colorado.edu Xref: news.ifm.liu.se rec.arts.books.reviews:482 rec.arts.books:118296 alt.books.reviews:10759 rec.arts.mystery:5455 alt.native:10936 soc.culture.native:12186 rec.arts.books.hist-fiction:2 rec.arts.sf.written:96264 THE TREE PEOPLE by Naomi M. Stokes. Forge/Tom Doherty Associates, 175 Fifth Ave, N.Y., NY 10010, (800) 221-7945, (212) 420-9314 FAX. 413 pp., $22.95 cloth. 0-312-85633-4 Reviewed by Steve Brock I'm not a big fan of Jane Auel, and when I found her name on the cover of "The Tree People," saying that the book was "Totally fascinating," I was not happy. "Here's another syrupy-sweet tale of an ancient people struggling with their emerging ability to reason," I thought. But I tunneled through the Auelish triggering of the plot, in which a "bad" Quinault shaman is buried alive in 1490 and a cedar tree planted on his grave to trap his soul, and resurfaced into the series of grisly murders that occur in the present-day when the soul is liberated in the 1990s on Washington's Olympic Peninsula. With a hefty dose of myth and an almost hypnotic sense of place, Stokes relates how a 500-year-old sacred cedar is toppled by the employee of a white-owned logging company, and the Quinault policeman who must locate her guardian spirit and journey to the "Land of the Dead" in order to force the shaman's spirit back into the ground. If the reader overlooks the long passages on saving old-growth forests and the Author's Notes (in which Stokes seeks to validate several of her plot devices which don't need to be legitimized), they will find a thrilling tale that fittingly delineates the danger, and the necessity, of retaining "the old ways." Grade: B. Also by Stokes: "The Castrated Woman: What Your Doctor Won't Tell You About Hysterectomy" (1986).