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Original Title: She Who Remembers
ISBN: 0451211448 (ISBN13: 9780451211446)
Edition Language: English
Series: Kwani #1
Online She Who Remembers (Kwani #1) Books Free Download
She Who Remembers (Kwani #1) Paperback | Pages: 496 pages
Rating: 4.03 | 7843 Users | 219 Reviews

Explanation To Books She Who Remembers (Kwani #1)

Kwani. A beautiful woman born in the American southwest into the long extinct Anasazi tribe, long before Columbus...whose blue eyes marked her as a witch and set her apart from the Indian tribe that raised her.

Following her path of destiny in a vanished world of great stone cities and trackless wilderness warring tribes and mysterious trabelers from other lands, Kwani found love with Kokopelli, the Toltec magician, who rescued her from death and took her to the Place of the Eagle Clan. There she was transformed from an outcast to the Chosen of the Gods, where she became She Who Remembers and taught young girls the ancient secrets only women know...secrets that provided her with inner power to overcome and triumph--and change her life forever.

Identify Of Books She Who Remembers (Kwani #1)

Title:She Who Remembers (Kwani #1)
Author:Linda Lay Shuler
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Deluxe Edition
Pages:Pages: 496 pages
Published:August 5th 2003 by NAL Trade (first published 1988)
Categories:Historical. Historical Fiction. Fiction. Prehistoric. Fantasy

Rating Of Books She Who Remembers (Kwani #1)
Ratings: 4.03 From 7843 Users | 219 Reviews

Crit Of Books She Who Remembers (Kwani #1)
I loved this book. It's a great story about an Anasazi women who is accused of being a witch and driven from her home. I have been studying the Pueblo people in one of my classes, and this story has a ton of historical accuracy. I couldn't put it down, and at the end, I had to run to the library to get the 2nd book to see what will happen to Kwani.

A novel of the prehistory of the Americas. I liked the historical fiction part of it, but there was just too much 'romance' for me... So much is made now of non-indigenous persons writing about the indigenous way of life. I am not sure how I feel about that, but think that in his case she may have overstepped the line of current sensibilities. Just my opinion, and an issue that I need to explore further.

I loved this book. It has been some time since I've read it, but I do plan on re-reading it. It is on my favorite's shelf and there is this novel's permanent place.I love native american historical fiction, and this book was chock full of myth, fact, intrigue, heartbreak, etc. It is so easy to define with the main character as to me she felt like a real life person. Her character was written up and described so well.I kept getting swept up in this novel, and to be frank was sad at it's ending.

This book is interesting because it gives context to the pueblo ruins in the southwest. It has flaws, but it is a fiction book and as I see it, this book was researched well considering what information is available for "pre-history". The list of references at the end of the book is impressive. Lyn does a great job. The book has been engaging all the way. It is a long book about a young 16 year-old Anasazi woman and her adventures in her growth. If you like the subject matter and are willing to



Well, wasn't that a huge disappointment? Seriously, whiny protagonist who seemed to solve every problem she encountered by either sitting down in a sulk or by spreading her legs. I was interested in this series as it seemed to be along similar lines to the Earth's Children series by Jean Auel. Ha! I found it massively lacking in detail, repetitive and difficult to slog through. I didn't like Kwani, she came across as a spoiled brat. We learn next to nothing about the other characters in the book

Alltough fiction it was a real world and felt strangely familiair as if i had been there myself.. A culture superior to many others in its ethics as linda describes it. The book helps to reconnect with nature and a more harmonious hollistic reconnection with all that is.

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