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Mountains of Stone


The Winds of Change


Mountain
Man


North West
Token


Frio Point 200 B.C. to 600A.D.


Beaver Pelt


Bead Work


Grey Owl


Backrest


Wampum


Cooking Pot


Horn Spoon


Stone
Hammer


Great Basin


Paleo-Indian Atlatl Point
8150-8010 B.C.


Howling Coyote Monument Valley


Metate Butler Wash


Trade Gun


Barrier Canyon


Bighorn Ram


Clovis Point


Indian Horse


Pierre's Hole


Archaic Indians


Trade Beads


House of Fire


Grand Teton Sunrise


Bluff Utah


Clear Cut


Hunter Panel


Buckhorn Wash


Chimney Rock


Cliff House


Prairie Schooner


Astorian Posts


Barrier Canyon


Cow Elk


Buffalo Chip


Winter Eagles


Elk Wallow


Mountains of Stone


Folsom Point


Morning Light


Oregon Trail


Rocky Ridge


Horse Creek Rendezvous


War Lodge


Horn Spoon


Handcart


Winter Buffalo


Fall Buffalo


Hunting Coyote


Dead Beats


Anasazi Pot


Morning Antelope


Winter Coyote


Cathedral Group


Stone Knife


Anasazi Sherds


Smith Fork Canyon


Hovenweep Moon


Jackson Hole Elk


Barrier Canyon


Rock Creek Plaque


Birthing Rock


Chevron Beads


Green River Knife


Fort Laramie


Great Basin


Four Corners Indians


Landscape Arch


Swift Creek


Moose


Clear Creek


William Clark's Signature


Fur Cache


Fremont Pithouse


Wind River


Indian Horse


Hole in the Rock


Cliff Dwellings


The Chute


Bull Elk


1988 - 2002 Yellowstone Fire


Martin's Cove


Ox Shoe


Trois Tetons


Grand Teton Elk


Winds of Change

 

 Article Link Bars   Comments, Questions, or Suggestions

MOUNTAINS OF STONE
by
Orland Ned Eddins

     Reader Comments  About the Author   Bibliography   Dead Beats

American Western Expansion  set in opposition two people--one with an insatiable thirst for furs and land--the other a territorial people with no concept of land ownership. Mother Earth was shared by all. The rich historical background coupled with cultural and religious aspects of Native Americans makes Mountains of Stone a gripping blend of historical facts and fiction. An exciting, page turning, storyline makes Mountains of Stone a "good read", as well as, educational.

Mountains of Stone contains an abridged account of the Lewis and Clark Expedition  and some of the major Hudson's Bay and North West Company fur traders and explorers. The interaction of the novel's central character, Broken Knife, with George Drouillard, Auguste Chouteau, Meriwether Lewis, William Clark, John Colter, Manuel Lisa, François-Antoine Larocque, and the Upper Missouri River Indians brings life to America's early western expansion.

                      To order Mountains of Stone click on the Tetons picture.

                                     

 You are not required to pre-pay or send credit card information when ordering Mountains of Stone.

After receiving the book, please pay the enclosed invoice. Mountains of Stone makes an excellent birthday gift. Each copy of Mountains of Stone will be signed with your message, and along with the picture CD, mailed directly to anyone you designate.

A sad commentary on present-day values is that there is little trust in people anymore. This is too bad. Being old fashioned, I trust people. The overwhelming majority of people that order Mountains of Stone bear out my faith in people. The "Dead Beats" are people that bought Mountains of Stone and have not paid for it. These people are not poor...just true worthless "Dead Beats".

Reader Comments:

Steve Anderson - Washington

 Having a hard time putting down the book!! Thank you for a great novel and look forward to your next one.

Just finished reading the Frontiers Man by Eckert and was searching for another book when I found your web site on Mountain Man Rendezvous sites. Great website with lots of information. I devour books about early American History! One of my favorites is Give Your Heart to the Hawks by Winfred Blevins. Both of these books are mainly the point of view from the white man side. Your book is from the other side of the coin and is a different point of view for readers.

Dave Smith - Riverside, California

Dr. Eddins, I have read the book and find it one of the best novels covering the early Fur Trade Era in our history. My copy is so "dog eared" I need to order a second copy for my neighbor and good friend.

Julie Rust - Tacoma Washington

Thank you very much for the well written and researched book, Mountains of Stone. I look forward to using it in my classroom. The pictures on the CD are extremely good and make me want to visit Wyoming.

Mary Ellen Rollins - Mountain Green, Utah

What a great story! I am having a hard time putting it down!

Dan Judd - Tracy, California

Just finished the book.  A great read.  I don't do a lot of reading (rather particular).  Had trouble putting it down.  I really enjoy a book that has this kind of flow.  Your style is the kind that I particularly enjoy.  I can't stay with a book if I don't feel the spirit.  I have to be able to live in a book that I read.  This one really put the hook in me.

Tim Heinse - Madison, Alabama

Mountains of Stone was a fascinating read, a real page turner that I hardly put down. I appreciated the authenticity and the obvious research you did on the subjects in the book. It reminded me a lot of Louis L'Amour's work.  Please send me the next one as soon as it's done. I also really enjoyed the photos, they bring back memories of my childhood out west. 

 For all the "deadbeats" that got the book and didn't pay, I can only assume you haven't read it as you would recognize its quality and value if you had read it. Please read the book and pay up. 

Kevin Fechtelkotter - Rapid City, SD

 I recently received your book MOUNTAINS OF STONE.  Just finished reading it.... for the second time.  First book that I've ever read and then read again, right away.  It was that enjoyable.  I'm looking forward to your next historical novel.  God's Blessings.

Gary Staton - Sedalia, Missouri

I purchased your book in NOV 2005 but for some reason never got around to reading it.  Finally I took time out to read and enjoy this fine book.  The depiction of the Indians and the times depicted were outstanding and a learning experience.  Fact and fiction were interwoven to make it a great learning experience and whet my appetite for more knowledge on the early days of the west.  Your writing is entertaining and makes the entire story come alive.  My only regret was that the book ended too soon and on a sad note of time to come for Wind & Broken Knife.  It is unfortunate that the Indians history went to a very sad period after the years covered in the story. I look forward to Winds of Change but hope it has bright spots to offset the history of the declining Indian ways.

This comment from a reader that didn't give his/her name was added because it made me feel good. Comments from knowledgeable people of the Rocky Mountain Fur Trade are especially gratifying.

Great book!! Due to clean up and repairs from Hurricane Katrina, I was not able to read your book until several months after I received the book in the mail. Once I started reading, I was not able to stop until I finished the last page. When will "Winds Of Change" become available? Soon I hope. I am a devoted student of the Rocky Mountain Fur Trade and the Native Americans of that era. Your book is one of the best I have read in a long time. Thank you very much for transporting me back in time to that wonderful age of the early Mountain Men. May God bless and keep you safe.

Arvene Wallem – Tabor, South Dakota

Just finished your book today.  Tried to go slow so the pleasure would last longer.  What a book.  I have read so much Wyoming, South Dakota, Dakota Territory history but none so interesting. Just wanted to applaud you, your book and efforts to redeem so much of the blame and hatred so many have for the American Indian. I always hate the attitude and contempt the majority of people have for the Indians.  They were doing just fine until "we" whites tried to "civilize" them. 

Gregg Gapp Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan

It took two nights, falling asleep with your book in my hands, to read it. I have to compliment you for your exceptional feat of mixing accurate historical facts with a story that must fascinate all that read it, even if they are not aware of the true history of the events and people that shaped not only our great nation, but also Canada.

My interest is in the Upper Great Lakes fur trade and your comments in your book regarding this area are 100% accurate. Your book should be mandatory reading for all school children in both of these great countries. Please put me on your mailing list for when your next book is available.

Anna Lee Waldo, author of SACAJAWEA, PRAIRIE, and the DRUID CIRCLE Series, wrote this about Mountains of Stone.

A friend sent me a copy of your book, MOUNTAINS OF STONE. I enjoyed it very much. I can tell by your background material and your extensive bibliography that you have put a lot of work into researching your material, I appreciate what you have done. Your work makes me think of the TV series by Ken Burns called AMERICAN STORIES. Part 5 of his series is about the Lewis and Clark Expedition. Part 6 continues through the Battle of the Little Bighorn and the Battle of the Mormons. Both of you writers use known historical facts in a fair and balanced manner to show what happens when two different cultures clash. We can not change the history of the American West but we ought not forget it. I especially liked your book because you used fictional characters, who seem truly authentic, to tie together the various Indian Nations and the encroaching fur traders, explorers, military men and pioneers. I look forward to your new book WINDS OF CHANGE.  

There are over one hundred of the best pictures from the Jackson Hole, Yellowstone, and Star Valley, Wyoming areas on a CD. The pictures make beautiful screensavers, or can be used as a slide show in Windows XP. Each copy of Mountains of Stone will be signed with your message, and along with the picture CD, mailed directly to anyone you designate.

                                     

About the Author:

O. N. Eddins is a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine. He was born and now resides in Afton, Wyoming, which is near Jackson Hole and the Grand Tetons—a landmark for Indians and Mountain Men. The majority of Mountains of Stone was written deep in the Greys River mountains near the Strawberry Indian trail from Jackson Hole and the Tetons to the Snake River plains. By horse and pack string, Dr. Eddins has ridden many of the trails described in Mountains of Stone. His campfires have been built in the same places as those of Mountain Men and explorers one hundred and ninety years ago. 

Dr. Eddins was an approved judge of the American Quarter Horse and the American Paint Horse associations, as well as, a certified ski instructor in Park City, Utah.

The sequel to Mountains of Stone, The Winds of Change, is concerned with the affects of western expansion on the Northwest Indians and the nomadic Plains Indians.


                                                    
     

                                                 Chapter Headings

The Piegan
Fort Raymond
War Rumbles
Osage Post
Tecumseh
General William Clark
St. Louis
The Spanish
Comanche
Cheyenne
Winds of Change
Indian Horse
 Redfeather
Eastbound Astorians
Westbound Astorians
Western Expansion Trivia
Bibliography

Western Expansion Trivia covers a collection of short historical facts related to the Rocky Mountain and Canadian fur trade and the Oregon Trail and the Mormon Trail  migrations.

A new CD of pictures is available with the purchase of The Winds of Change.

To pre-order The Winds of Change click on the logo below.

                                                                 

 The List of Dead Beats - Click on Snake for Details

Sidney McLaughlin, Brigitte Lucke, PhD, Paul Topham, David A Miller – Dead Beats Cade Humphrey, Shane Garcia, William Perugino, Michael Loretto – Dead Beats, Allen Willyerd, Jon Merritt, Timothy Dietz, Larry Opheim – Dead Beats,  Linda Bennington, Virginia Perches, Kris Giedosh, Brett D Pfingston – Dead Beats, Gail Belt, Shawn Seigler, Gerald Gallimore, Sandra Bowden – Dead Beats,  Nikki Davenport,  Don McCall, Gary Blauser, Randy Adam - Dead Beats, Feigue Cieplinski, PhD, Jim Georgeson – Dead Beats.

For those that appreciate the information on this site, please send these Dead Beats an email, or give them a call.

To send a comment, a question, or a suggestion click on Mountain Man.

                       

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