I read this on a nook, not a kindle, and every time that is true, I will say so in my reviews as a small protest to the notion that amazon has already cornered e-readers. Not yet, not yet.
Okay, so the book. I was torn as to how to rate this. First, you can see from the description that it is very brief as biographies go, just over 150 pp. The information up front was really interesting, one more bit that I wish I'd had before I taught history instead of after (though my students would probably say I was already giving them tmi). WHO KNEW that the entire eastern seaboard of the current USA was once considered "Florida"? There are all sorts of meaty tidbits like this nestled into the text.
Point of view is also useful. Though, being a period piece, American Indians are constantly referred to as "savages" and given such unfair descriptions as "hideous" and so forth, one does get an in-the-moment feeling for what it would be like to be an ambitious Euro-American going forth on the government's promise of 400 acres of lush, fertile farmland ABSOLUTELY FREE, for being among the first hardy souls to shove your way through the wilderness and clear the ground, start a settlement. You haven't been told that there are Cherokees already farming this land. You are merely told that a fort nearby, along with government treaties, will see to it that the Indians don't bother you, but to keep a sharp lookout anyway. So off you go.
The whole modern day stereotype of the stealthy Indian who sneaks up on someone and scalps them in less than thirty seconds really, really happened back then. Natives had figured out that by the time one tried to figure out which Caucasians were going to be fair and honest, and which would lie, that they would lose their land and starve to death when the settlers scared away the game, was true too, but these settlers did not know, and so it helps a bit when examining the history of the North American continent to look at that side of it, and it is laid out very descriptively here.
The irritating part: for 150-some pages, I expected all of them to be about Boone. Instead, for no fathomable reason, forty pages or so are abruptly directed at the Lewis and Clark expedition, which deserves, and has, many many books of its own. I was already well versed on L&C; I live in the NW part of the USA, and it is the bread and butter of both the tourist industry and local history taught in our schools. I'm tired of it, to be honest, and would not have paid money to read it.
So if you buy this biography, know you are paying for 110 pages of Boone. I got a bargain rate, so it was not so bad. Had I paid full hard cover price, this would be a two-star review at best, and I would be really crabby.