Presents twelve episodes illustrating the expert skills in tracking that the author learned from an Apache expert, demonstrating how the Native American art of survival can bring the spiritual rewards of higher consciousness and inner peace. Reprint."
The Way of the Scout: A Native American Path to Finding Spiritual Meaning in a Physical World ANNOTATION The bestselling author of The Tracker presents 12 new stories which illustrate the advanced tracking skills taught to him by the Apache he knew as Grandfather. Brown reveals the lessons of the scout--the eyes and ears of the clan--showing how the physical skills of the ancient art of survival can lead to spiritual rewards of personal awareness and inner peace.
FROM THE CRITICS School Library Journal YAThis is essentially a continuation of The Tracker (Berkley, 1986), which told of Brown's childhood in the Pine Barrens of southern New Jersey and the survival skills he learned from an old Apache scout who was wise in the ways of the woods. In this title, the author broadens and deepens his skills through training adventures during his adolescence and young adulthood. Such a book could be corny, but the very earnestness of the narrative demands a sympathetic reading. Being a scout involves a macho code of behavior that combines the martial arts, wilderness survival skills, and a conservation ethic that, combined with a strong, spiritual element, contains and directs the skills in positive, moral ways. While The Tracker dealt with forest skills, this one offers stories of the author's forays into the modern world. Brown has for many years run a
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