While the title of this perceptive study of hope and dread in Montana literature might seem to limit his audience, Ken Egan takes care to point out that the boom-and-bust cycle so well known to his fellow Montanans and so well documented by many of the state\u27s authors is a familiar pattern throughout the Great Plains states whose economies and lifestyles have also depended on extractive industries and agricultural pursuits. Egan makes this clear in his discussion of Joseph Kinsey Howard\u27s Montana: High, Wide, and Handsome (1943). Howard\u27s book of essays, Egan says, recapitulates the trends that Hope and Dread documents: waves of dreams that come to naught on the high plains and in the mountains; betrayal by word and deed of native...
Legal scholar Charles Wilkinson reads and recommends books as if the Video Age were not upon us and ...
FREE LAND was the Cry! For 123 years the Homestead Act provided millions of people the opportunity t...
In the North American Review for 1815, Walter Channing suggested that America could compensate for i...
While the title of this perceptive study of hope and dread in Montana literature might seem to limit...
This remarkable collection of essays offers something for every reader interested in Montana literat...
For fifteen years, poet Merrill Gilfillan has been driving in long misshapen circles through the H...
Marvin Gloege has assembled an impressive array of information about demographic trends affecting th...
How does one describe the nature of this place that is the Great Plains? Diane Quantic and P. Jane H...
Historians tend not to take roadside histories very seriously, even while the literate public appr...
The method of The Word Rides Again is straightforward. J. David Stevens first constructs a model of ...
Kent Midgett arrived with his family in Hibbard, on the Wind-swept Plains of eastern Montana, late i...
Late in the nineteenth century, Native Americans of the Plains attempted, through a sacred dance, to...
Montana Legacy is a sequel to the well-received 1992 anthology, The Montana Heritage. Like its prede...
Powerful mythologies have always blocked people\u27s understanding of the American West. This book p...
Conquistadors and cowboys, Indians and Exodusters - to say nothing of such luminaries in the pantheo...
Legal scholar Charles Wilkinson reads and recommends books as if the Video Age were not upon us and ...
FREE LAND was the Cry! For 123 years the Homestead Act provided millions of people the opportunity t...
In the North American Review for 1815, Walter Channing suggested that America could compensate for i...
While the title of this perceptive study of hope and dread in Montana literature might seem to limit...
This remarkable collection of essays offers something for every reader interested in Montana literat...
For fifteen years, poet Merrill Gilfillan has been driving in long misshapen circles through the H...
Marvin Gloege has assembled an impressive array of information about demographic trends affecting th...
How does one describe the nature of this place that is the Great Plains? Diane Quantic and P. Jane H...
Historians tend not to take roadside histories very seriously, even while the literate public appr...
The method of The Word Rides Again is straightforward. J. David Stevens first constructs a model of ...
Kent Midgett arrived with his family in Hibbard, on the Wind-swept Plains of eastern Montana, late i...
Late in the nineteenth century, Native Americans of the Plains attempted, through a sacred dance, to...
Montana Legacy is a sequel to the well-received 1992 anthology, The Montana Heritage. Like its prede...
Powerful mythologies have always blocked people\u27s understanding of the American West. This book p...
Conquistadors and cowboys, Indians and Exodusters - to say nothing of such luminaries in the pantheo...
Legal scholar Charles Wilkinson reads and recommends books as if the Video Age were not upon us and ...
FREE LAND was the Cry! For 123 years the Homestead Act provided millions of people the opportunity t...
In the North American Review for 1815, Walter Channing suggested that America could compensate for i...