I don't buy it. This is a novel, not a memoir. What is described sounds like a fantasy story, not anthropology. I gave it two stars because I can't refute all of it. However...
I checked out this book because he mentions Nevada medicine man Rolling Thunder, who was a real medicine man. And he grew up in Oklahoma in a medicine culture, just as David Carson claims to have experienced.
And this book sounds nothing like what Rolling Thunder practiced or discussed.
I could certainly be wrong about this, but I've never heard of a medicine man or woman who called themselves a conjurer. Yes, you can say that medicine people frequently "work with" earth spirits to request some result in the health of a person in the ecological world of physical reality.
But conjuring sounds like the whole point is to become a wizard who weaves spells, an über individualist when the reality of medicine people is to keep people in a relationship of wholeness with the earth, the people and one's family and friends.
I bet most spend their time listening and talking, in a counseling sense, more than performing multi-hour long healing rituals. I think they also devote themselves to keeping the people on the good red road, so they also work in a preventative medicine sense.
I've met a few on the direct action frontlines against nuclear weapons testing and to save woodlands and sacred mountains. In personal fact, Rolling Thunder hasn't just inspired me metaphysically, by as a mentor for environmental movie-making. RT would use his senses to find *and film* U.S. Bureau of Land Management bulldozers chaining down piñon pine forests. I've since devoted much of my life to documenting the Earth First! activist subculture of which I have been an organizer activist since 1985.
But David Carson doesn't seem to have the slightest interest in the affairs of the world or any specific community. I found this to be the case in Barack Obama's first two memoirs too. He seems to have no connection to anything going on in the world he grew up in, *until* he became a community organizer as an adult. Those books are two of the three worst books I've ever read (the worst is Lo! by Charles Fort).
Even as a novel, Carson has written a book absent any offering of native American wisdom at all!
This is a vacuous book by a lying Carlos Castaneda wannabe.