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In 1836 in East Texas, nine-year-old Cynthia Ann Parker was
kidnapped by Comanches. She was raised by the tribe and eventually
became the wife of a warrior. Twenty-four years after her capture,
she was reclaimed by the U.S. cavalry and Texas Rangers and
restored to her white family, to die in misery and obscurity.
Cynthia Ann's story has been told and re-told over generations to
become a foundational American tale. The myth gave rise to operas
and one-act plays, and in the 1950s to a novel by Alan LeMay, which
would be adapted into one of Hollywood's most legendary films, "The
Searchers," "The Biggest, Roughest, Toughest... and Most Beautiful
Picture Ever Made " directed by John Ford and starring John Wayne.
Glenn Frankel, beginning in Hollywood and then returning to the
origins of the story, creates a rich and nuanced anatomy of a
timeless film and a quintessentially American myth. The dominant
story that has emerged departs dramatically from documented
history: it is of the inevitable triumph of white civilization,
underpinned by anxiety about the sullying of white women by
"savages." What makes John Ford's film so powerful, and so
important, Frankel argues, is that it both upholds that myth and
undermines it, baring the ambiguities surrounding race, sexuality,
and violence in the settling of the West and the making of America.
Glenn Frankel, who won a Pulitzer Prize for his work as The
Washington Post's Jerusalem bureau chief, pulls no punches in this
thorough exploration of the birth of a new Israel. His remarkable
access -- to figures ranging from the most senior officials to the
young Palestinian street fighters -- informs his sweeping account
of years of civil unrest, political upheaval and diplomatic crisis.
The result is an unprecedented look at the people caught up in the
dance between Israel and the Palestinians.
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