One Thousand White Women: The Journals of May Dodd

One Thousand White Women: The Journals of May Dodd

1998 • 338 pages

Ratings21

Average rating3.4

15

Story about May Dodd and her adventure of becoming a Cheyenne wife. This story is set in the 1800's. Chief Little Wolf had a meeting with President Grant proposing that they trade horses for 100 white women in order to mix the races thus becoming one people and bringing peace between the white people and the natives. This was all true. Of course President Grant didn't take the Chief's proposal seriously and that is where history ends and this story begins. In this story about 100(can't remember exactly) of the women are recruited and given as gifts to the Cheyenne, among these is May Dodd. Many of the women recruited to become Cheyenne wives are recruited from mental institutions and jails. May Dodd was in a mental institution for being promiscuous. Her family didn't like who she had chosen as a life partner and therefore institutionalized her. She starts writing about her adventures in a series of journals.

The book was well written and honestly led one to think these were real people and real historical facts. The book is mixed up with fictional characters as well as real people. So, I came to really like May Dodd and at times I thought she really was crazy, lol. You grow to like and care for all these women, for the Cheyenne husbands and hope that all turns out ok... it doesn't.

The ending was a bit tragic and left me kind of numb and sad.

Overall, good book, really well written, I didn't have a problem with the author being a man writing in a woman's voice(he did this well), EXTREMELY wordy a lot of the time.

October 24, 2011Report this review