One Thousand White Women: The Journals of May Dodd (One Thousand White Women, #1)

by Jim Fergus

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Book cover for One Thousand White Women

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May Dodd, born to wealth in Chicago in 1850, left home in her teens and through a family disgrace is imprisoned in a monstrous lunatic asylum.

In 1875 Little Wolf, chief of the Cheyenne nation, comes to Washington to seal a treaty with President Ulysses S. Grant and suggests that peace between Whites and Cheyenne could be established if the Cheyenne were given white women as wives, and that the tribe would agree to raise the children from such unions. Grant secretly recruits 1,000 women from jails, penitentiaries, debtors' prisons, and mental institutions offering full pardons or unconditional release.

May, who jumps at the chance, embarks upon the adventure of her lifetime, along with a colourful assembly of pioneer women. She keeps the fictional journal we read, marries Little Wolf, lives in a crowded tipi with his two other wives and their children and lives the life of a Cheyenne squaw.

'Jim Fergus so skillfully envelops us in the heart and mind of his main character, May Dodd, that we weep when she mourns, we shake our fist at anyone who tries to sway her course, and our hearts pound when she is in danger'--Colorado Springs Gazette

  • ISBN10 0312199430
  • ISBN13 9780312199432
  • Publish Date 15 February 1999 (first published 15 March 1998)
  • Publish Status Active
  • Out of Print 22 May 2010
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint St Martin's Press
  • Edition 3rd ed.
  • Format Paperback
  • Pages 496
  • Language English