The Best Native American Historical Fiction Novels Set Before Columbus — Why Ojibway Stories Are L

Author : David Jones | Published On : 27 Feb 2026

A Blind Spot in Historical Fiction
 
Most Native American historical fiction novels begin at a painful point in time — the moment Europeans arrived. Colonization, forced removal, residential schools — these are important stories, and they deserve to be told. But what about the thousands of years that came before?
 
As Book Riot notes, indigenous history is sorely lacking from school curriculums in the U.S. and Canada, and even from many mainstream history books. The gap becomes even wider when we look at Books Set Before Columbus Novels arrived in 1492. Pre-contact America — its cultures, its conflicts, its daily life — remains one of the most underrepresented eras in all of popular fiction.
 
That is slowly beginning to change. And Ojibway stories are leading that charge.
 
What Makes Pre-Columbus Fiction So Rare — and So Valuable?
 
According to Wikipedia's entry on Native American literature, Native American storytelling arises from "a rich set of oral traditions predating European contact." Yet converting those oral traditions into accessible, historically accurate fiction has proven difficult — and rare.
 
Most pre-Columbian fiction that does exist tends to focus on Southwest tribes, Aztec civilization, or the Iroquois Confederacy. 
 
That is what makes Ojibway Historical Fiction Novels such a distinct and valuable contribution to the genre right now.
 
The Chogan Native American Series: Setting the Standard
 
Of the books set before Columbus that exist today, few are as specific, as accessible, or as culturally grounded as Larry Buege's Chogan Native American Series.
 
According to his official website and confirmed across all of his Amazon listings, the series follows an Ojibway family living in 100 B.C. — a full fifteen centuries before Columbus. 
 
Here is what sets the Chogan series apart from other Native American historical fiction novels:
 
• Culturally specific setting. The stories are rooted in the Ojibway world around Lake Superior — a region and culture that almost no other pre-contact fiction has explored.
 
• Embedded cultural education. Each novel contains references to 6–8 stand-alone websites with real color photos demonstrating survival skills Chogan must learn, from making cord out of milkweed to gathering wapatoo. 
 
• Wide age appeal. The series carries a Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level of 4.6, yet second-grade students have enjoyed it when read aloud by teachers — and adult readers have praised it equally on Amazon.
 
• Inter-tribal storytelling. Titles like Chogan and the Sioux Warrior and Chogan and the Winnebago Merchant explore the complex relationships between multiple Native nations — something rarely attempted in pre-contact fiction.
 
Why These Stories Matter Right Now?
 
The Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of the American Indian, through its Native Knowledge 360° program, has specifically called for books that offer "accurate and tribally specific portrayals of Indigenous people, both past and present."
 
For readers searching for the best Native American historical fiction novels that go back to the beginning — not just to 1492 — the Ojibway stories of the Chogan series, alongside the Gears and Shuler, are the place to start.