Osceola had no illusions that the struggle would be an easy one. But after years of humbly acquiescing to the white men’s demands, he was ready to fight no matter what the cost. The young men would have the chance to earn war honors. Their women would have reason to be proud of them again.
When “Old Man” Jackson declared war on the Seminole, he never envisioned battling a people who would become symbols of courage, loyalty, and patriotism. Led by the mighty warrior Osceola and witnessed by his beloved daughter Little Warrior, they were men and women fighting an unjust war of greed and aggression — and the bonds of love and rebellion that united them would thrust them into the heart of a conflict that would change the world and their lives forever.
“Robson is especially good at detailing the daily life of the 19th Century Seminoles and her Osceola is a charismatic and proud hero.” — The Orlando Sentinel
Talking Earth
“Billie Wind lives with her Seminole tribe. She follows their customs, but the dangers of pollution and nuclear war she’s learned about in school seem much more real to her. How can she believe the Seminole legends about talking animals and earth spirits? She wants answers, not legends.”You are a doubter,”say the men of the Seminole Council and so Billie goes out into the Everglades alone, to stay until she can believe. In the wilderness, she discovers that she must listen to the land and animals in order to survive. With an otter, a panther cub, and a turtle as companions and guides, she begins to understand that the world of her people can give her the answers she seeks.