This was a good book about the geology of northern Minnesota and the Pays d'en Haut. This was an even better book when it spoke of the lives of the Indians living there for thousands of years. The presentations by Earth Walks even made me tear up and I found the book deeply human and touching.
More than just a geology and history textbook, Talking Rocks explores the deep history of the Great Lakes region in a personable style, and relates it to the interconnected experience of Native Americans who came to inhabit the land over thousands of years. The approach of the authors is to expose geological and cultural information, to weave them together, and to do so with a feeling for good storytelling, a more intimate style. As both a book about Great Lakes geology and Great Lakes cultural history, it is worth reading. The relatively wide-ranging geography covered by the book makes for less in-depth exploration of each topic, but themes are nonetheless explored well.
I took a Native American Lit course long ago from the book's co-author, Carl Gawboy, and his down-to-earth demeanor and friendly sense of humor come through nicely in the reading.
The historical content of this book and the insights it gives to Minnesota geology is fascinating, but the conceit is just kind of weird. I don’t know if it’s just a product of its time, or what. Of all the ways to try to make this content interesting—a fictional lecture series? Really? It doesn’t seem like this really needed to be fiction, or to have an arrogant white scientist tossing around microaggressions toward his Native colleague to learn these things that are actually pretty interesting on their own. The scenes created by Earth Walks were among the most interesting parts, and I sort of wish the entire book had been driven by the creation of such hypothetical scenes supplemented by the relevant information in a creative nonfiction type of way.
The information itself though is clearly delivered and extremely educational. The execution leaves something to be desired.
Very interesting collaboration between a geologist and an Carl Gawboy (why isn't he mentioned as a co-author). Learn something about Indian history along side geological understanding of northern Minnesota. The work connecting constellations with Minnesota pictographs is worth the cost of the book and more!
This is more about Ojibwe people, history culture, beliefs, and traditions than it is about the geology of Lake Superior, but it's a great read regardless. I knew next to nothing about Native American people before reading this, and the book was entirely stuff I didn't know. I would absolutely recommend it.
Scientific and Spiritual history come together from 2 different viewpoints to teach and understand the other side more. A geologist and Native American work together. Set in Lake Superior Region , gives a deeper understanding of this area.
3.5 stars. The narrative was somewhat awkward but I appreciated the insight and knowledge to indigenous lives and use of the local geological features.
This book is all about Native American interpretations of the geology around the lake superior region. When I read it, I became tranced into a spiritual fantacy that John Blanchard explains it as: "the doors to perception"