Books and A Young Boy's Imagination

Books are capable of transporting the reader anywhere in space and time. When I was in the fourth and fifth grade I was fascinated with the Old West. I loved reading about indians and the cavalry. My favorite author was
Shannon Garst. This author had me hooked. I read many of his/her 19 books. This picture is of Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce Indians. His story is compelling. He did not fight the US Cavalry, but ran from them. His elusiveness was legendary. He and his people were retreating to Canada. Their one thousand mile trek ended only forty miles from the Canadian border. Chief Joseph's words still haunt me from his surrender speech, "as the sun now stands, I will fight no more forever." My young heart sympathized with the indians. It seemed all they wanted was to live their life as they had for thousands of years.
I learned about the Sioux and other plains tribes. Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, and others. I also read about Custer and the military campaigns of the day. I could not get enough. I remember my eleventh birthday (1968) I got to go to downtown Kansas City and see the new movie,
Custer of the West. I would not recommend the movie - not accurate.
About that same time, our family took three week vacations in the summer, two years in a row. One year we went to the northwest and the next we visited the southwestern United States. My dad drove a white Chevy station wagon which pulled a tent camper. On these trips, the books I had read came to life. I got to associate real places with the battles and historical figures I had read about. In South Dakota, I already knew the
Black Hills were sacred to the Lakota tribes. I also knew the indian name for the hallowed land was "paha sapa." When we first saw the Badlands, I told my mother, "mama, this is the most beautiful thing I have ever seen."
In Montana standing on the wind swept hill where
Custer and his troops were massacred, I could imagine the sounds of battle as I watched the tall grass bend from the breeze. We were there in June which is when the battle actually took place. Shannon Garst had me well prepared to visit these places and today my memory is still vivid. There is something sacred and dignified about a battlefield. Most people sense it and show respect with silence and subdued voices.
The next summer when we explored the southwest I learned about the Navajo and
Hopi Indians. I remember sitting at campfires listening to park rangers tell stories about Indian legend. The cool air drove the campers closer to the fire. The faces illuminated by the dancing flame were fixed on the story teller. We hung on every word as he described the Kachina's - spirits that would pay visits to children who misbehaved. This took place at
Mesa Verde. I owe a debt to whomever steered me to Shannon Garst and those wonderful books. I feel so fortunate to have traveled around the areas of the United States which represented the epicenter of my then interests. Those memories and images are still with me and I flip through them often.
Me, My Dad, and My Brother at the Grand Canyon |
There is no substitute for experience. In the film
Good Will Hunting, Matt Damon plays Will, a genius, but with major attitude problems. Robin Williams is the psychiatrist charged with turning the boy around. Robin Williams character almost gave up until something occurred to him. The psychiatrist said to Will, "you cannot tell me anything that I cannot learn from a book. But can you tell me what the Sistine Chapel smells like? Do you know the feeling of holding your newborn son? Do you have any idea what it is to be completely in love with someone?" As a young boy, I was amazed already by reading those books. The pictures my imagination painted was reward enough, but when I got to go to the places and smell the loam of the earth, feel the breeze and the warm native sunshine on my face, my imagination could go even farther. I could gaze at the horizon and imagine a line of indians charging. I could turn around and imagine being encircled as Custer was. I thought about the aftermath when the soldiers were stripped of their uniforms and some were mutilated; the smell of death and smoke; the sound of women crying in the way only the loss of a spouse can produce. The only survivor of the battle was Custer's horse
Comanche. I have seen this horse several times on display at the University of Kansas. We went to KU five years in a row to take my son to the Roy Williams Basketball Camp. Seeing Comanche rekindled these memories each time.
Books, travel, good fortune, and a young boy's imagination. I have been fortunate enough to have had them all.
Until the next time
John Strain