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Book Reviews of The Only Good Indians

The Only Good Indians
The Only Good Indians
Author: Stephen Graham Jones
ISBN-13: 9781982136451
ISBN-10: 1982136456
Publication Date: 4/7/2020
Pages: 320
Rating:
  • Currently 3.6/5 Stars.
 8

3.6 stars, based on 8 ratings
Publisher: Gallery / Saga Press
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

2 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

dragoneyes avatar reviewed The Only Good Indians on + 829 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This book is centered around four American Indian friends that were together on a hunting trip gone wrong. It tells stories on that time period but mainly 10 years later, after the incident. In the later years we learn more about each individual and where their lives have taken them.
I had a hard time with the writing style. I had to constantly reread paragraphs just to get the gist of what the author was meaning. That made it very hard to settle down comfortably into the book. Eventually, more than halfway through the book, I was able to adjust to the writing style. There were a lot of parts that just seemed to stretch on that were quite boring for me though. Made it hard for me to pick up the book and stick with it. Lots of pages on playing basketball. Which, if that is your thing, you'll probably enjoy it. It was not for me.
Now, when the craziness happened, it was over the top! I couldn't put the book down. It was brutal and heart-wrenching. The story line itself was different and creepy. Enjoyed that and I enjoyed the characters. Especially Lewis, Cass and Denorah.
So it puts me about middle way on how I felt about the book. Parts I liked and parts I didn't. It seems everyone gets different takes on it so it might just be one you need to pick up and see how it makes you feel.
terez93 avatar reviewed The Only Good Indians on + 323 more book reviews
This intriguing cross-genre novel is quite complex and multi-dimensional, as many reviewers have noted. The author displays a capable familiarity with elements of Native American belief and culture, and respectfully weaves a narrative of traditional and modern elements of horror. The book tells the tale of a group of friends who each meet with a tragic fate, after committing a sin against nature in their youth. In addition, in particular, one of the contrite friends, Lewis, seemingly makes a Faustian deal with a dark entity, who comes calling years later, demanding and exacting terrible retribution.

The four friends, in their intemperate youth, violate the boundaries of a hunting area reserved for tribal elders, and there wantonly and illegally slaughter a herd of elk, including a young, pregnant cow, who dies a terrible and traumatic death, along with her unborn calf. The four are caught by the game warden, who makes them promise to never hunt again on the reservation in exchange for avoiding heavy fines and penalties... but the real punishment is yet to come, for each of them. I don't want to give too many spoilers here, but each of the men pay a heavy penalty, in ways most meaningful to them, often involving the suffering and death of those closest to them.

As many other reviewers have noted, the novel is complex, speaking to a number of realities which plague residents of the modern reservations even today, including crushing poverty and a lack of opportunity, racism (one of the friends is murdered by white co-workers - though who, or what, is ultimately responsible is debatable, as it appears that he is yet another victim of the dark power which is exacting its revenge), multi-generational trauma and dysfunction, addiction, and identity.

I appreciated the book, even though it didn't speak to me in the way many others have recently. As other reviewers have also reported, the writing style, a staccato-like, almost slang vernacular, which I was not terribly familiar with, made reading it somewhat difficult and awkward, for me, even though it was thoroughly comprehensible. The plot also lags in places; it seems to attempt to rather creepily set the scene, but that isn't always as successful as it wants to be. It is, overall, however, visually evocative and highly descriptive, which lends a great realism to the prose, which is deeply unsettling, but it was still difficult for me to get into it. That said, it's a generally enjoyable read, especially for those who enjoy cross-genre, creative and non-traditional horror.