
audiobook
by John Tanner
CAPTIVITY OF JOHN TANNER
INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER
TANNER’S NARRATIVE. - CHAPTER I.
PART TWO
Ne-bish-un—Trees with broad leaves.
A young boy taken from his family, John Tanner spent three decades living among the Ojibwe, learning their language, customs, and even marrying into the tribe. His narrative recounts the daily rhythms of life on the frontier—hunting, trading, and the deep bonds formed with his foster mother and community—while also revealing the gradual erosion of his English tongue and the sense of self he once knew. The vivid first‑person account captures both the harsh wilderness and the intimate moments that shaped his identity as a bridge between two worlds.
When Tanner finally returned to white settlements, the transition proved far more painful than any physical hardship he had endured. He faced suspicion, cultural dislocation, and an inner conflict between the life he had adopted and the society that now seemed alien. The book follows his earnest, often anguished attempts to reconcile these opposing parts of himself, offering listeners a poignant glimpse into a life caught between two cultures.
Full title
A Narrative of the Captivity and Adventures of John Tanner (U.S. Interpreter at the Saut de Ste. Marie) During Thirty Years Residence among the Indians in the Interior of North America During Thirty Years Residence among the Indians in the Interior of North America
Language
en
Duration
~14 hours (843K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2020-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

d. 1847
Best known for a remarkable captivity narrative, this frontier memoir tells how a white boy taken in childhood came to spend about thirty years living among Native communities in the interior of North America. His account remains a vivid firsthand window into borderland life, survival, and cultural change.
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