Who exactly is Hawkeye in your novels?

Categories: Characters, Wilderness novels

James Fenimore Cooper wrote a series of books called the Leatherstocking Tales. His main character was Natty [Nathaniel] Bumppo (also called Hawkeye, and several other names), and seemed to be based on the legends that grew up around the real life character Daniel Boone. One of his novels was The Last of the Mohicans; another, set in Hawkeye’s later life, was The Pioneers.

The Last of the Mohicans has been filmed a number of times, the last and most memorable by the director and producer Michael Mann. That is the movie staring Daniel Day-Lewis and Madeline Stowe. In Mann’s version of the story, Hawkeye’s real name was Nathaniel Po.

I wasn’t so much interested in retelling the story of The Last of the Mohicans — that has been done often enough — but I was interested in Hawkeye’s later life. So I set out to do a few things:

  • first, write a very loose retelling of The Pioneers (keeping some of the plot, some of the characters, and some of the themes, especially the environmental ones);
  • second, to tell the story from the female perspective (Cooper was a fine storyteller, but he didn’t write women very well — they come across as idealized and two-dimensional);
  • third, to put my own spin on the legend of the frontiersmen who populated the New-York frontier;
  • fourth, to try my best not to contribute to the stereotypes rampant in literature about the Mohawk. I hoped to portray them as a people who survived in spite of great hardship.

Because I wanted to put my own version on paper, I changed Hawkeye’s name yet again. Not Bumppo or Po or Boone, but Bonner. So I have a Dan’l Bonner and his son, Nathaniel Bonner.

  • Masterfully done, and I was thrilled to have a vision of what happened in Hawkeye’s life after the three of them stood on the mountaintop together at the end of the movie. Granted, I have not read Cooper’s book, but when I finish with The Endless Forest, I will do so because your writings are so inspiring. It will be interesting to see the story that planted the seed.

    • Hi Naomi — Thank you. It’s good to hear from readers who are interested in the wider context of the stories. I wish you patience with Cooper’s novel, which is challenging for modern readers.

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    2 thoughts on “Who exactly is Hawkeye in your novels?”

    1. Masterfully done, and I was thrilled to have a vision of what happened in Hawkeye’s life after the three of them stood on the mountaintop together at the end of the movie. Granted, I have not read Cooper’s book, but when I finish with The Endless Forest, I will do so because your writings are so inspiring. It will be interesting to see the story that planted the seed.

      Reply
      • Hi Naomi — Thank you. It’s good to hear from readers who are interested in the wider context of the stories. I wish you patience with Cooper’s novel, which is challenging for modern readers.

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