In the past decade biography as a field within American history has made a strong comeback, and Robert M. Utley\u27s study of the Hunkpapa Lakota (Sioux) leader Sitting Bull is an excellent contribution to the field. Writing the life story of an Indian leader who died more than one hundred years ago is difficult at best. For example, even the birth date of the subject is open to question. Nevertheless, the author has written a thorough, balanced, and informed book. In it Sitting Bull emerges as a rational person living within his culture, having recognizable goals, and experiencing both success and failure. Utley\u27s narrative rests solidly on what is known or can be reconstructed about nineteenth-century Hunkpapa society
It is a rare gift to receive a milestone book to review. Kingsley Bray\u27s Crazy Horse: A Lakota Li...
Review of: "Custer, Cody, and Grand Duke Alexis: Historical Archaeology of the Royal Buffalo Hunt," ...
Set-t\u27 ainte, or White Bear, whose name was Anglicized into Satanta, was one of the most feared...
In the past decade biography as a field within American history has made a strong comeback, and Robe...
Dubbed the Fighting Cock of the Sioux by the U.S. soldiers he confronted, the Hunkpapa warrior Gal...
More than a century has elapsed since George Armstrong Custer led his command into a military disast...
The U.S. Army excused the killing of one of its officers, Lt. Edward W. Casey, by Plenty Horses, an ...
Yenne\u27s Sitting Bull is not so much a biography as it is a panorama of Northern Plains history fr...
Review of: The Last Sovereigns: Sitting Bull and the Resistance of the Free Lakotas, by Robert M. Ut...
Review of: Cavalier in Buckskin: George Armstrong Custer and the Western Military Frontier. Utley, R...
I first met Robert Larson at the 1993 conference of the Western History Association at Tulsa, Oklaho...
Review of: Buffalo Bill and Sitting Bull: Inventing the Wild West. Bridger, Bobby
More than a century has elapsed since George Armstrong Custer led his command into a military disast...
Battlefield and classroom is an important book that looks at a crucial era in American Indian histor...
Among the attempts to give the Indian version of the Battle of the Little Bighorn, Gregory F. Michno...
It is a rare gift to receive a milestone book to review. Kingsley Bray\u27s Crazy Horse: A Lakota Li...
Review of: "Custer, Cody, and Grand Duke Alexis: Historical Archaeology of the Royal Buffalo Hunt," ...
Set-t\u27 ainte, or White Bear, whose name was Anglicized into Satanta, was one of the most feared...
In the past decade biography as a field within American history has made a strong comeback, and Robe...
Dubbed the Fighting Cock of the Sioux by the U.S. soldiers he confronted, the Hunkpapa warrior Gal...
More than a century has elapsed since George Armstrong Custer led his command into a military disast...
The U.S. Army excused the killing of one of its officers, Lt. Edward W. Casey, by Plenty Horses, an ...
Yenne\u27s Sitting Bull is not so much a biography as it is a panorama of Northern Plains history fr...
Review of: The Last Sovereigns: Sitting Bull and the Resistance of the Free Lakotas, by Robert M. Ut...
Review of: Cavalier in Buckskin: George Armstrong Custer and the Western Military Frontier. Utley, R...
I first met Robert Larson at the 1993 conference of the Western History Association at Tulsa, Oklaho...
Review of: Buffalo Bill and Sitting Bull: Inventing the Wild West. Bridger, Bobby
More than a century has elapsed since George Armstrong Custer led his command into a military disast...
Battlefield and classroom is an important book that looks at a crucial era in American Indian histor...
Among the attempts to give the Indian version of the Battle of the Little Bighorn, Gregory F. Michno...
It is a rare gift to receive a milestone book to review. Kingsley Bray\u27s Crazy Horse: A Lakota Li...
Review of: "Custer, Cody, and Grand Duke Alexis: Historical Archaeology of the Royal Buffalo Hunt," ...
Set-t\u27 ainte, or White Bear, whose name was Anglicized into Satanta, was one of the most feared...