OKLAHOMA
UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA PRESS
FALL/WINTER
2007
AWARD-WINNING BOOKS
CONTENTS Baby Doe Tabor, Temple
9
Billy the Kid Reader, The, Nolan
7
Books on Trial, Wiegand/Wiegand Charles Goodnight, Hagan Charles M. Russell: A Catalogue Raisonné, Price
5 18 22-23
Cherokee Medicine Man, Conley
16
Choctaw Language and Culture, Haag/Willis
26
Choctaws in Oklahoma, The, Kidwell
27
Daschle vs. Thune, Lauck Deadly Dozen, DeArment
24
Gall, Larson
11
George Thomas, Einolf
13
Great Day to Fight Fire, A, Matthews
4
8
Health Care in Maya Guatemala, Adams/Hawkins
33
Indian Conquistadors, Matthew/Oudijk
29
International Encyclopedia of Horse Breeds, Hendricks
15
Inventing Los Alamos, Hunner
17
Irish General, The, Wylie
20
Matilda Coxe Stevenson, Miller
28
Mr. Jefferson’s Hammer, Owens
30
Muhammad, Gabriel
16
Northern Cheyenne Album, A, Liberty
14
Reign of Cleopatra, The, Burstein
35
Roots of Resistance, Dunbar-Ortiz
34
Scottish Highlanders and Native Americans, Szasz
32
Seminole Freedmen, The, Mulroy
31 2
Trojan War, The, Thomas/Conant
35
Verne Sankey, Bjorkman
6
Victorio, Chamberlain
Where Custer Fell Photographs of the Little Bighorn Battlefield Then and Now By James S. Brust, Brian C. Pohanka, and Sandy Barnard 978-0-8061-3834-3 $24.95 Paper John M. Carroll Award (Book of the Year) Little Big Horn Associates
Calamity Jane The Woman and the Legend By James McLaird 978-0-8061-3591-5 $29.95 Cloth Westerners Co-Founders Best Book Award Westerners International
Dreams to Dust A Tale of the Oklahoma Land Rush By Sheldon Russell 978-0-8061-3721-6 $26.95 Cloth 2006 Langum Prize in American Historical Fiction Langum Project for Historical Literature
Party Wars Polarization and the Politics of National Policy Making By Barbara Sinclair 978-0-8061-3779-7 $21.95 Paper 2006 Choice Magazine Outstanding Academic Title
High Country A Novel By Willard Wyman 978-0-8061-3697-4 $24.95 Cloth Spur Award Best First Novel Western Writers Association
1
Native American Placenames, Bright
Three Plays, Momaday
The Conquest of Texas Ethnic Cleansing in the Promised Land, 1820–1875 By Gary Clayton Anderson 978-0-8061-3698-1 $29.95 Cloth Caroline Bancroft Prize Denver Public Library
10
Voices from the Heartland, Taylor/Dial-Driver/Burrage/ Emmons-Featherston
3
Volunteers on the Veld, Miller
25
Will Rogers, Performer, Maturi/Maturi
17
William F. Cody’s Wyoming Empire, Bonner
21
Women Who Pioneered Oklahoma, Baker/Henshaw
19
Working Man’s Apocrypha, A, Luvaas
12
Recent Releases
36
Best-Selling Paperbacks
38
Sales and Ordering Information
40
Index
41
ON THE FRONT: CHARLES M. RUSSELL STANDING BESIDE HIS MASTERWORK WHEN THE LAND BELONGED TO GOD, 1914. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE FREDERIC G. AND GINGER K. RENNER COLLECTION, PARADISE VALLEY, ARIZONA.
A Decent, Orderly Lynching The Montana Vigilantes and Their Troublesome Legacy By Frederick Allen 978-0-8061-3651-6 $34.95 Cloth Best Western Outlaw-Lawman Book of the Year National Outlaw-Lawmen Association
Peoples of the Plateau The Indian Photographs of Lee Moorhouse, 1898–1915 By Steven L. Grafe 978-0-8061-3742-1 $29.95 Paper Best Publication Oklahoma Museums Association
Confessions of a Berlitz-Tape Chicana By Demetria Martínez 978-0-8061-3722-3 $14.95 Paper Latino Book Awards Best Biography Latino Literacy Now
FALL/WINTER
Biography
2007
1
NEW BOOKS
MUHAMMAD Islam’s First Great General By Richard A. Gabriel An examination of Muhammad’s life as a military leader That Muhammad succeeded as a prophet is undeniable; a prominent military historian now suggests that he might not have done so had he not also been a great soldier. Best known as the founder of a major religion, Muhammad was also Islam’s first great general. While there have been numerous accounts of Muhammad the Prophet, this is the first military biography of the man. In Muhammad: Islam’s First Great General, Richard A. Gabriel shows us a warrior never before seen in antiquity—a leader of an all-new religious movement who in a single decade fought eight major battles, led eighteen raids, and planned thirty-eight other military operations. Gabriel’s study portrays Muhammad as a revolutionary who introduced military innovations that transformed armies and warfare throughout the Arab world. Gabriel analyzes the environment in which Muhammad lived and the religion he inspired as they relate to his military achievements. Gabriel explains how Muhammad changed the social composition of Arab armies by replacing traditional ways of fighting with a new command structure. Muhammad’s transformation of Arab warfare enabled his successors to establish the core of the Islamic empire—an accomplishment that, Gabriel argues, would have been militarily impossible without Muhammad’s innovations. Richard A. Gabriel challenges existing scholarship on Muhammad’s place in history and offers a viewpoint not previously attempted.
OF RELATED INTEREST Ghengis Khan’s Greatest General Subotai the Valiant By Richard A. Gabriel 978-0-8061-3734-6 $14.95 Paper
Volume 11 in the Campaigns and Commanders series Richard A. Gabriel is a military historian and Distinguished Adjunct Professor in the Department of History and War Studies at the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ontario. He is a retired U.S. Army officer and the author of forty books.
September 288 Pages 6x9 12 maps 978-0-8061-3860-2 $24.95 Cloth
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2
Performing Arts/Drama
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THREE PLAYS The Indolent Boys, Children of the Sun, and The Moon in Two Windows By N. Scott Momaday Theatrical works celebrating Kiowa history and culture “N. Scott Momaday’s theatrical writing . . . contributes to the stage a unique dramatic voice whose resonance echoes in our very souls.”—M. Z. Ribalow, playwright and artistic director of New River Dramatists Long a leading figure in American literature, N. Scott Momaday is perhaps best known for his Pulitzer Prize–winning House Made of Dawn and his celebration of his Kiowa ancestry, The Way to Rainy Mountain. Momaday has also made his mark in theater through two plays and a screenplay. Published here for the first time, they display his signature talent for interweaving oral and literary traditions. The Indolent Boys recounts the 1891 tragedy of runaways from the Kiowa Boarding School who froze to death while trying to return to their families. The play explores the consequences, for Indian students and their white teachers, of the federal program to “kill the Indian and save the Man.” A joyous counterpoint to this tragedy, Children of the Sun is a short children’s play that explains the people’s relationship to the sun. The Moon in Two Windows, a screenplay set in the early 1900s, centers on the children of defeated Indian tribes, who are forced into assimilation at Carlisle, Pennsylvania, where the U.S. government established the first offreservation boarding school. Belonging with the best of Momaday’s classic writing, these plays are works of a mature craftsman that preserve the mythic and cultural tradition of unique tribal communities in the face of an increasingly homogeneous society. Volume 4 in the Oklahoma Stories & Storytellers series OF RELATED INTEREST The Cherokee Night and Other Plays By Lynn Riggs 978-0-8061-3470-3 $14.95 Paper American Gypsy Six Native American Plays By Diane Glancy 978-0-8061-3456-7 $34.95 Cloth
September 224 Pages 5 1/2 x 9 4 b&w illus. 978-0-8061-3828-2 $24.95 Cloth
N. Scott Momaday—internationally acclaimed poet, novelist, playwright, storyteller, artist, and teacher—was born in Lawton, Oklahoma, and grew up in various communities in the Southwest as his teacher parents moved among reservation schools. A Kiowa and member of the Kiowa Gourd Clan, he holds a Ph.D. from Stanford University and has taught at Stanford, Berkeley, and the University of Arizona. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and is author of The Ancient Child; In the Presence of the Sun: Stories and Poems, 1961–1991; The Names: A Memoir; In the Bear’s House; and other books, collections of poetry, and articles. Marketing • Regional print advertising in Oklahoma Today and World Literature Today • On display at Modern Language Association, Western Writers of America
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FALL/WINTER
Memoir/Women
2007
3
NEW BOOKS
VOICES FROM THE HEARTLAND Edited by Carolyn Anne Taylor, Emily Dial-Driver, Carole Burrage, and Sally Emmons-Featherston A thought-provoking collection of essays on life and living Voices from the Heartland is a celebration of women’s contributions to Oklahoma’s recent past. It records defining moments in women’s lives—whether surviving the Oklahoma City bombing or surviving abuse—and represents a wide range of professions, lifestyles, and backgrounds to show how extraordinary lives have grown from the seeds of ordinary girlhoods. From former Cherokee principal chief Wilma Mankiller, First Lady Kim Henry, novelist Billie Letts, and prima ballerina Maria Tallchief, to OU basketball coach Sherri Coale, the authors share their personal reflections on finding balance as they look back on defining moments in their lives, mull over what they wish they had learned sooner, and convey the wisdom they’ve unearthed on their journeys thus far. Touching on topics from adultery to left-handedness, from losing children to losing perspective, these essays speak from the heart to reveal what it means to be an American woman today. Readers will meet activists and writers, advocates and artists—some of whom are household names, while others work outside the public eye. Voices from the Heartland speaks to readers all across America and demonstrates that women in Oklahoma represent the heart of us all. Carolyn Anne Taylor is Associate Professor of Political Science at Rogers State University, Claremore, Oklahoma. She previously served eight years in the Oklahoma House of Representatives. Emily Dial-Driver is Professor of English at Rogers State University. Her essays, poems, and short stories have appeared in numerous publications. Carole Burrage, a former federal law clerk, is retired as Assistant Professor of Social and Behavioral Studies at Rogers State University. Sally Emmons-Featherston is Associate Professor of English at Rogers State University. Of Choctaw-Cherokee-Irish descent, she specializes in contemporary Native American literature.
September 292 Pages 6x9 978-0-8061-3858-9 $19.95 Cloth
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NEW BOOKS
4
Politics/South Dakota
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DASCHLE VS. THUNE Anatomy of a High-Plains Senate Race By Jon K. Lauck The story behind the unseating of a Senate majority leader “Jon Lauck’s account of one of the hardest-fought elections in the 2004 campaign should be must reading for Democrats as well as Republicans.”—Michael Barone, Senior Writer, U.S. News & World Report The race between Tom Daschle and John Thune in South Dakota was widely acknowledged as “the other big race of 2004.” Second in prominence only to the presidential race, the Daschle-Thune contest pitted the rival political ideologies that have animated American politics since the 1960s. In a sign of the ongoing strength of political conservatism, Daschle became the first Senate leader in fifty years to lose a re-election bid. Historian Jon K. Lauck, a South Dakotan who was an insider during that heated campaign, now offers a multilayered examination of this hard-fought and symbolically charged race. Blending historical narrative, political analysis, and personal reflection, he offers a close-up view of the issues that divide the nation—a case study of the continuing clash between liberalism and conservatism that has played out for more than a generation in U.S. politics. Daschle vs. Thune moves beyond the nitty-gritty of public policy to deftly show how the recent past continues to shape the ongoing political battles that animate pundits and bloggers. It is a compelling story told by a writer who knows both his home ground and how it fits into the wider U.S. context. Jon K. Lauck is Senior Advisor to U.S. Senator John Thune and author of American Agriculture and the Problem of Monopoly: The Political Economy of Grain Belt Farming, 1953–1980. He resides in Sioux Falls.
September 304 Pages 6x9 12 b&w illus. 978-0-8061-3850-3 $24.95 Cloth
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FALL/WINTER
History/Civil Rights
2007
5
NEW BOOKS
BOOKS ON TRIAL Red Scare in the Heartland By Shirley A. Wiegand and Wayne A. Wiegand How civil liberties triumphed over national insecurity Between the two major red scares of the twentieth century, a police raid on a Communist Party bookstore in Oklahoma City marked an important lesson in the history of American freedom. In a raid on the Progressive Bookstore in 1940, local officials seized thousands of books and pamphlets and arrested twenty customers and proprietors. All were detained incommunicado and many were held for months on unreasonably high bail. Four were tried for violating Oklahoma’s “criminal syndicalism” law, and their convictions and ten-year sentences caused a nationwide furor. After protests from labor unions, churches, publishers, academics, librarians, the American Civil Liberties Union, members of the literary world, and prominent individuals ranging from Woody Guthrie to Eleanor Roosevelt, the convictions were overturned on appeal. Shirley A. Wiegand and Wayne A. Wiegand share the compelling story of this important case for the first time. They reveal how state power—with support from local media and businesses—was used to trample individuals’ civil rights during an era in which citizens were gripped by fear of foreign subversion. Richly detailed and colorfully told, Books on Trial is a sobering story of innocent people swept up in the hysteria of their times. It marks a fascinating and unnerving chapter in the history of Oklahoma and of the First Amendment. In today’s climate of shadowy foreign threats—also full of unease about the way government curtails freedom in the name of protecting its citizens—the past speaks to the present. Shirley A. Wiegand is Professor of Law at Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Wayne A. Wiegand is the F. William Summers Professor of Library and Information Studies and Professor of American Studies at Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida.
October 280 Pages 6x9 7 b&w illus. 978-0-8061-3868-8 $24.95 Cloth
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6
Criminals and Outlaws
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VERNE SANKEY America’s First Public Enemy By Timothy W. Bjorkman A fast-paced adventure of a 1930s kidnapper In late January of 1934, as authorities delivered John Dillinger to an Indiana jail, the United States Justice Department announced, for the first time, that the Federal Bureau of Investigation had just captured America’s Public Enemy No. 1. It was not Dillinger the Justice Department was referring to, but an affable railroader turned outlaw, Verne Sankey. Now Timothy W. Bjorkman has written the first full-length biography of this overlooked criminal, relating how a South Dakota family man became a bootlegger, a bank robber, and eventually, a kidnapper whose deeds heralded a nationwide crime spree. In the early days of Prohibition, Sankey, then a locomotive engineer, was drawn to the easy money he could make bootlegging. When crime syndicates monopolized the trade and Prohibition’s end was in sight, he turned to the occasional bank robbery and eventually to a ransom scheme. In tracing the life of Sankey—and his demure wife, Fern—Bjorkman depicts a good-natured man, friendly neighbor, and gentleman rumrunner catering to the banker and broker trade. He also explores Sankey’s motivations, his identification as America’s first Public Enemy, and his ultimate descent into oblivion.
OF RELATED INTEREST Running with Bonnie and Clyde The Ten Fast Years of Ralph Fults By John Neal Phillips 978-0-8061-3429-1 $19.95 Paper
Verne Sankey: America’s First Public Enemy is a riveting narrative set amid the Great Depression. Bjorkman’s research painstakingly reveals the life of Verne Sankey and his times, delving into the intriguing story of the family of his kidnapping victim, Charles Boettcher II, and the stark contrast between wealth and poverty during some of America’s most harrowing days. Timothy W. Bjorkman is a judge for the the First Judicial Circuit of his native South Dakota. He, his wife, Carol Kay, and four sons—James, John, Sam, and Seth—live in Canistota.
October 288 Pages 6x9 19 b&w illus. 978-0-8061-3853-4 $24.95 Cloth
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FALL/WINTER
2007
Criminals and Outlaws
THE BILLY THE KID READER By Frederick Nolan More than a century’s worth of essential writing on America’s most famous outlaw “Once again Fred Nolan has validated his distinction as the world’s leading authority on Billy the Kid. No one knows more.”—Robert M. Utley, author of Billy the Kid: A Short and Violent Life Despite the countless books and films devoted to him, Billy the Kid remains one of the most elusive figures of the Old West. Now, award-winning western historian Frederick Nolan has scoured the published literature to offer this wellrounded compendium on the life and times of William H. Bonney. The Billy the Kid Reader contains some of the best articles on the Kid—including gems no longer in print. From the first dime novel that appeared shortly after his death to the research of today’s historians, these writings bring Bonney’s life into sharp focus. Nolan highlights two distinct schools of Billy the Kid studies: works of popularizers who tended to exaggerate his historical role, and the findings of grassroots researchers who have reassessed our perceptions of the Kid. Dozens of illustrations enhance the text, illuminating the Kid’s career and notoriety. This collection shows that the life of William H. Bonney is not yet a closed book—far from it. Many versions of his life remain little more than unchallenged tradition. The Billy the Kid Reader puts that lengthy body of work in perspective and will satisfy seasoned Kid aficionados as well as first-time readers eager to learn more about the man and the legend. Frederick Nolan is a leading authority on outlaws and gunfighters of the Old West. His award-winning books include The West of Billy the Kid; The Wild West: History, Myth, and the Making of America; and The Lincoln County War: A Documentary History. He resides in England.
OF RELATED INTEREST The Authentic Life of Billy, the Kid By Pat F. Garrett 978-0-8061-1195-7 $14.95 Paper The West of Billy the Kid By Frederick Nolan 978-0-8061-3104-7 $29.95 Paper Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman By Leon C. Metz 978-0-8061-1838-3 $24.95 Paper
November 400 Pages 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 37 b&w illus., 1 map 978-0-8061-3849-7 $29.95 Cloth
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7
NEW BOOKS
NEW BOOKS
8
History/Montana
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A GREAT DAY TO FIGHT FIRE Mann Gulch, 1949 By Mark Matthews A story of lost youth, broken hearts, and man’s inability to conquer nature Mann Gulch, Montana, 1949. Sixteen men ventured into hell to fight a raging wildfire; only three came out alive. Searing the fire into the nation’s consciousness, Norman Maclean chronicled the Mann Gulch tragedy in his award-winning book Young Men and Fire. Still, the silence of the victims’ families robbed Maclean’s account of an essential personal dimension. Shifting the focus from the fire to the men who fought it, Mark Matthews now provides that perspective. Not until 1999—the fiftieth anniversary of the fire—did people begin to talk openly about Mann Gulch. Matthews has garnered those thoughts to reveal how devastating the fire was to the firefighters’ family members, coworkers, and friends. In retelling the story of Mann Gulch, he draws on the testimony of the three survivors—including never-before-published insights from the last living member of the team—and interviews with former smoke jumpers of that era. The result is a moment-by-moment, heart-stopping re-creation of events.
OF RELATED INTEREST Smoke Jumping on the Western Fire Line Conscientious Objectors during World War II By Mark Matthews 978-0-8061-3766-7 $29.95 Cloth
October 280 Pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 18 b&w illus., 2 maps 978-0-8061-3857-2 $24.95 Cloth
The Mann Gulch tragedy provoked the Forest Service to develop safety equipment and training programs, but fighting wildfires is still a perilous job. Matthews’ stirring account renews our respect for one of nature’s primal forces. A heartbreakingly human story, it still haunts a firefighting community—and keeps today’s firefighters forever on guard. Mark Matthews, a writer living in Missoula, Montana, is the author of Smoke Jumping on the Western Fire Line: Conscientious Objectors during World War II. He is a former wildland firefighter for the U.S. Forest Service and former Forestry Technician for the Lolo National Forest.
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FALL/WINTER
Biography
2007
9
NEW BOOKS
BABY DOE TABOR The Madwoman in the Cabin By Judy Nolte Temple Unravels the psyche of Colorado’s most adored adulteress The story of Baby Doe Tabor has seduced America for more than a century. Long before her body was found frozen in the Leadville shack where for decades she had guarded the Matchless Mine, Elizabeth McCourt “Baby Doe” Tabor was the stuff of legend. The stunning divorcée married Colorado’s wealthiest mining magnate and became “the Silver Queen of the West.” Horace and Baby Doe mesmerized the world with their wealth and extravagance. Blessed with two daughters and with the Matchless Mine’s earnings of $2,000 a day, they spent seemingly limitless riches. But Baby Doe’s life was also a morality play. Almost overnight, the Tabors’ wealth disappeared when depression struck in 1893. Forced to shovel slag at the mines, Horace died six years later. According to the legend, one daughter left home never to return; the other died horribly. For thirty-five years, Baby Doe, who was considered mad, lived in solitude high in the Colorado Rockies. Baby Doe Tabor left a record of her madness in a set of writings she called her “Dreams and Visions.” These were discovered after her death but never studied in detail—until now. In Baby Doe Tabor: The Madwoman in the Cabin, author Judy Nolte Temple retells Lizzie’s story with greater accuracy than any previous biographer. She unpacks the mythology to uncover Lizzie’s actual experiences as told in her fragmentary writings and correspondence. Undertaking the first close analysis of Lizzie’s writings, Temple reveals a story more heartbreaking than the legend and, for the first time, gives voice to the woman behind the myth. Judy Nolte Temple, Associate Professor of Women’s Studies and English at the University of Arizona, is the author (under the name Judy Nolte Lensink) of “A Secret to Be Burried:” The Diary and Life of Emily Hawley Gillespie, 1858–1888.
OF RELATED INTEREST Colorado Ghost Towns and Mining Camps By Sandra Dallas 978-0-8061-2084-3 $24.95 Paper A Lady’s Life in the Rocky Mountains By Isabella L. Bird 978-0-8061-1328-9 $8.95 Paper A Room for the Summer Adventure, Misadventure, and Seduction in the Mines of the Coeur D’Alene By Fritz Wolff 978-0-8061-3658-5 $29.95 Cloth
October 280 Pages 6x9 28 b&w illus. 978-0-8061-3825-1 $24.95 Cloth
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10
American Indian/Biography
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VICTORIO Apache Warrior and Chief By Kathleen P. Chamberlain A thoroughgoing portrait of the feared contemporary of Geronimo “Carefully researched and clearly written.”—Roger L. Nichols, author of American Indians in U.S. History A steadfast champion of his people during the wars with encroaching AngloAmericans, the Apache chief Victorio deserves as much attention as his better-known contemporaries Cochise and Geronimo. In presenting the story of this nineteenth-century Warm Springs Apache warrior, Kathleen P. Chamberlain expands our understanding of Victorio’s role in the Apache wars and brings him into the center of events. Although there is little documentation of Victorio’s life outside military records, Chamberlain draws on ethnographic sources to surmise his childhood and adolescence and to depict traditional Warm Springs Apache social, religious, and economic life. Reconstructing Victorio’s life beyond the military conflicts that have since come to define him, she interprets his character and actions not only as whites viewed them but also as the logical outcome of his upbringing and worldview. Chamberlain’s Victorio is a pragmatic leader and a profoundly spiritual man. Caught in the absurdities of post–Civil War Indian policy, Victorio struggled with the glaring disconnect between the U.S. government’s vision for Indians and their own physical, psychological, and spiritual needs.
OF RELATED INTEREST Apaches A History and Culture Portrait By James L. Haley 978-0-8061-2978-5 $24.95 Paper The Apaches Eagles of the Southwest By Donald E. Worcester 978-0-8061-2397-4 $21.95 Paper
Graced with historic photos of Victorio, other Apaches, and U.S. military leaders, this biography portrays Victorio as a leader who sought a peaceful homeland for his people in the face of wrongheaded decisions from Washington. It is the most nearly complete and balanced picture yet to emerge of a Native leader caught in the conflicts and compromises of the nineteenth-century Southwest. Volume 22 in The Oklahoma Western Biographies Series Kathleen P. Chamberlain is Professor of History at Eastern Michigan University and author of Under Sacred Ground: A History of Navajo Oil, 1922–1982.
Indeh An Apache Odyssey By Eve Ball with Nora Henn and Lynda A. Sánchez 978-0-8061-2165-9 $21.95 Paper
October 272 Pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 16 b&w illus., 4 maps 978-0-8061-3843-5 $24.95 Cloth
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FALL/WINTER
Biography/American Indian/Western History
2007
11
NEW BOOKS
GALL Lakota War Chief By Robert W. Larson First-ever scholarly biography of the man said to have killed Custer Called the “Fighting Cock of the Sioux” by U.S. soldiers, Hunkpapa warrior Gall was a great Lakota chief who, along with Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse, resisted efforts by the U.S. government to annex the Black Hills. It was Gall, enraged by the slaughter of his family, who led the charge across Medicine Tail Ford to attack Custer’s main forces on the other side of the Little Bighorn. Robert W. Larson now sorts through contrasting views of Gall, to determine the real character of this legendary Sioux. This first-ever scholarly biography also focuses on the actions Gall took during his final years on the reservation, unraveling his last fourteen years to better understand his previous forty. Gall, Sitting Bull’s most able lieutenant, accompanied him into exile in Canada. Once back on the reservation, though, he broke with his chief over Ghost Dance traditionalism and instead supported Indian agent James McLaughlin’s more realistic agenda. Tracing Gall’s evolution from a fearless warrior to a representative of his people, Larson shows that Gall contended with shifting political and military conditions while remaining loyal to the interests of his tribe. Filling many gaps in our understanding of this warrior and his relationship with Sitting Bull, this engaging biography also offers new interpretations of the Little Bighorn that lay to rest the contention that Gall was “Custer’s Conqueror.” Gall: Lakota War Chief broadens our understanding of both the man and his people. Robert W. Larson is retired as Professor of History at the University of Northern Colorado, Greeley. He is the author of numerous articles and books, including Red Cloud: Warrior-Statesman of the Lakota Sioux. The Denver Posse of Westerners honored him in 2006 with its Fred A. Rosenstock Award for Lifetime Achievement in Western History.
OF RELATED INTEREST Geronimo The Man, His Time, His Place By Angie Debo 978-0-8061-1828-4 $24.95 Paper
Quanah Parker, Comanche Chief By William T. Hagan 978-0-8061-2772-9 $14.95 Paper
Cochise Chiricahua Apache Chief By Edwin R. Sweeney 978-0-8061-2606-7 $24.95 Paper
August 320 Pages 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 25 b&w illus., 3 maps 978-0-8061-3830-5 $24.95 Cloth
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12
Fiction
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A WORKING MAN’S APOCRYPHA Short Stories By William Luvaas Cutting-edge fiction that breathes life into unlikely characters In these unforgettable stories, William Luvaas depicts the struggles of everyday people facing situations far from the ordinary. Through tales set largely in Southern California’s Inland Empire, Luvaas weaves magic and absurdity around characters caught between apocalypse and heartbreak. Deftly spinning haunting plots, he conveys the joys and misfortunes of folks who confront trauma or loss and find unexpected opportunities for survival. Here is nature run amok: A tornado whirls away a man’s wife and daughter, but they return midway into his ensuing romantic affair. Flood survivors in California’s coastal range build makeshift arks in anticipation of the world’s watery end. Other stories fathom relationships, as a diabetic’s suicide in the title story renews a cycle of unrequited love, or aging twins reconcile with the loss of their childhood intimacy. All come to grips with contemporary problems: poverty, disease, or powerlessness in the face of economic inequality, religious fanaticism, and corporate greed. Whether writing from the point of view of a semiliterate handyman or an elderly woman facing death on a cold night, Luvaas delivers stories, characters, and voices that are the stuff of cutting-edge fiction. A Working Man’s Apocrypha is masterful storytelling that will leave readers breathless. William Luvaas, who teaches creative writing and literature at San Diego State University, is the author of The Seductions of Natalie Bach and Going Under. His short fiction, reviews, and essays have appeared in the American Literary Review, Antioch Review, Cosmopolitan, The Village Voice, Harper’s Weekly, and Glimmer Train.
OF RELATED INTEREST Dreaming on a Sunday in the Alameda and Other Plays By Carlos Morton 978-0-8061-3641-7 $16.95 Paper I Hear the Train Reflections, Inventions, Refractions By Louis Owens 978-0-8061-3354-6 $19.95 Cloth Miracle A Novel By Leo Dubray 978-0-8061-3672-1 $19.95 Cloth
September 224 Pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 978-0-8061-3837-4 $24.95 Cloth
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FALL/WINTER
Biography/Military History/Civil War
2007
13
NEW BOOKS
GEORGE THOMAS Virginian for the Union By Christopher J. Einolf One of the North’s greatest generals—the Rock of Chickamauga “A splendid biography”—James M. McPherson, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Battle Cry of Freedom Most Southerners in the U.S. Army resigned their commissions to join the Confederacy in 1861. But at least one son of a distinguished, slaveholding Virginia family remained loyal to the Union. George H. Thomas fought for the North and secured key victories at Chickamauga and Nashville. Thomas’s wartime experiences transformed him from a slaveholder to a defender of civil rights. Remembered as the “Rock of Chickamauga,” Thomas became one of the most prominent Union generals and was even considered for overall command of the Union Army in Virginia. Yet he has been eclipsed by such names as Grant, Sherman, and Sheridan. Offering vivid accounts of combat, Einolf depicts the fighting from Thomas’s perspective to allow a unique look at the real experience of decision making on the battlefield. He examines the general’s recurring confrontations with the Union high command to make a strong case for Thomas’s integrity and competence, even as he exposes Thomas’s shortcomings and poor decisions. The result is a more balanced, nuanced picture than has previously been available. Probing Thomas’s personal character, Einolf reveals how a son of the South could oppose the views of friends and family. George Thomas: Virginian for the Union offers a fresh appraisal of an important career and lends new insight into the inner conflicts of the Civil War. Volume 13 in the Campaigns and Commanders series Christopher J. Einolf is the author of The Mercy Factory: Refugees and the American Asylum System.
OF RELATED INTEREST Rock of Chickamauga The Life of General George H. Thomas By Freeman Cleaves 978-0-8061-1978-6 $19.95 Paper Three Years with Quantrill A True Story By John McCorkle 978-0-8061-3056-9 $19.95 Paper Bold Dragoon The Life of J.E.B. Stuart By Emory M. Thomas 978-0-8061-3193-1 $19.95 Paper
November 416 Pages 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 16 b&w illus., 12 maps 978-0-8061-3867-1 $29.95 Cloth
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NEW BOOKS
14
American Indian/Photography
oupress.com
New in Paperback
A NORTHERN CHEYENNE ALBUM Photographs by Thomas B. Marquis Edited by Margot Liberty Commentary by John Woodenlegs Rare photographs document the lives of Cheyenne people during the early reservation years “For anyone interested in seeing a cultural transition chronicled in pictures and narratives, this book is a gold mine.”—Richard E. Littlebear, President of Chief Dull Knife College In 1878 the Northern Cheyennes left what is now Oklahoma, where they had been incarcerated, and began an epic journey back to their homeland. They suffered great losses, but a small group of survivors reached its destination in southeastern Montana in 1879 and eventually won the right to a reservation there. A Northern Cheyenne Album presents a rare series of never-before-published photographs that document the lives of tribal people on the reservation during the early twentieth century—a period of rapid change.
OF RELATED INTEREST Peoples of the Plateau The Indian Photographs of Lee Moorhouse, 1898–1915 By Steven L. Grafe 978-0-8061-3742-1 $29.95(S) Paper A Danish Photographer of Idaho Indians Benedicte Wrensted By Joanna Cohan Scherer 978-0-8061-3684-4 $29.95 Cloth
Reservation physician and expert photographer Thomas B. Marquis captured Northern Cheyenne life in numerous images taken from 1926 to 1935. After 1960, former tribal president John Woodenlegs and others interviewed tribal elders and, drawing on tape recordings, composed the photos’ lively captions. Margot Liberty, editor of this volume, has added her own descriptions, filling in details of Northern Cheyenne culture and history from a scholar’s viewpoint. A valuable record of an all-but-forgotten generation, this volume is also an inspiring tribute to the Northern Cheyenne elders whose resilience and adaptability helped ensure the future of their people. Margot Liberty is an anthropologist specializing in American Indian cultures and the American West. She is coauthor (with John Stands in Timber) of the classic work Cheyenne Memories. John Woodenlegs was President of the Northern Cheyenne Tribe from 1955 to 1968 and the founder of Chief Dull Knife Memorial College, Lame Deer, Montana. Thomas B. Marquis was a physician and photographer who lived and worked among the Northern Cheyennes from 1922 until his death in 1935.
July 304 Pages 9x9 142 b&w illus. 978-0-8061-3893-0 $29.95 Paper
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FALL/WINTER
Reference/Horses
2007
15
NEW BOOKS
New in Paperback
INTERNATIONAL ENCYCLOPEDIA OF HORSE BREEDS By Bonnie Hendricks Foreword by Anthony A. Dent A standard reference on horse breeds, illustrated and updated “A fascinating, enlightening, and entertaining volume that belongs in every horseman’s library”—Albuquerque Journal Celebrating the animal that has been a stalwart servant to humankind for countless generations, Bonnie Hendricks’s International Encyclopedia of Horse Breeds is the most thorough compilation of horse breeds ever attempted. The nearly four hundred entries, arranged alphabetically, include foundation breeds now extinct as well as extant breeds from across the globe. Each entry details the breed’s origin and background, size, appearance, chief use, and status (rare versus common). A list of breed associations and government departments that supplied data and photographs for the encyclopedia has been fully updated for this edition. With its breadth and depth of coverage, as well as 530 black-and-white and 32 color illustrations, the encyclopedia continues to be a standard international reference. Bonnie L. Hendricks, who bred and raised quarter horses, Appaloosas, and Spanish Barb Mustangs for many years, organized the American Buckskin Horse Registry and the International Buckskin Horse Registry. She has spent more than forty years studying horse breeds of the world. Anthony A. Dent, a leading authority on horses and their history, breeds Arab and Anglo-Arab horses. He is the author or translator of several books, including The Horse through Fifty Centuries of Civilization (author) and They Rode into Europe: The Fruitful Exchange in the Arts of Horsemanship between East and West (translator).
OF RELATED INTEREST The American Paint Horse By Glynn W. Haynes 978-0-8061-2144-4 $24.95 Paper The King Ranch Quarter Horses And Something of the Ranch and the Men That Bred Them By Robert Moorman Denhardt 978-0-8061-2771-2 $24.95 Paper Foundation Sires of the American Quarter Horse By Robert Moorman Denhardt 978-0-8061-2947-1 $19.95 Paper
August 512 Pages 7 x 10 32 color and 530 b&w illus. 978-0-8061-3884-8 $24.95 Paper
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NEW BOOKS
16
Biography/American Indian
Reference/American Indian
New in Paperback
New in Paperback
CHEROKEE MEDICINE MAN
NATIVE AMERICAN PLACENAMES OF THE UNITED STATES
The Life and Work of a Modern-Day Healer By Robert J. Conley A modern medicine man portrayed through the words of the people he has helped “Fans of Conley, get this book! As always, reading his work is like talking to an old friend.”—Deborah L. Duvall, author of How Medicine Came to the People: A Tale of the Ancient Cherokees Robert J. Conley did not set out to chronicle the life of Cherokee medicine man John Little Bear. Instead, the medicine man came to him. Little Bear asked Conley to write down his story, to reveal to the world “what Indian medicine is really about.” For Little Bear, as for the Cherokee ancestors who brought their traditions over the Trail of Tears to Indian Territory, the medicine is about helping people. Visitors from neighboring states and Mexico come to him, each one seeking help for a different kind of problem. Each seeker’s story is presented here exactly as it was told to Conley. Little Bear has cured problems involving health, relationships, and money by uncovering the source of the problem rather than simply treating the symptoms. Whereas mainstream medicine and counseling have failed his patients, Little Bear’s healing practices have proven beneficial time and again. Robert J. Conley lives with his wife, Evelyn, in Norman, Oklahoma. His poetry, short stories, novels, and nonfiction works have been published in several languages and have received many awards.
July 160 Pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 42 b&w illus. 978-0-8061-3877-0 $14.95 Paper
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By William Bright The most comprehensive authority on placenames of American Indian origin “Bright has produced the very best we have today on the subject . . . a remarkable achievement and a great pleasure to read”—International Journal of American Linguistics American Indian words define the North American landscape. This volume combines historical research and linguistic fieldwork with Native speakers from across the United States to present the first comprehensive, up-to-date scholarly dictionary of American placenames derived from Native languages. Accomplished linguist William Bright assembled a team of twelve editorial consultants—experts in Native American languages—and many other contributors to prepare this lexicon of eleven thousand placenames along with their etymologies. Bright’s introduction explains his methodology and the contents of each entry. New data from leading scholars makes this volume an invaluable reference for students of American Indian culture, folklore, and local history. William Bright was Professor of Linguistics and Anthropology at UCLA and served as the editor of the journals Language, Language in Society, and Written Language and Literacy. He also edited the International Encyclopedia of Linguistics and The World’s Writing Systems. August 608 Pages 7 x 10 978-0-8061-3598-4 $29.95 Paper
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History/New Mexico
Biography/Arts
17
NEW BOOKS
New To OU Press
New in Paper
WILL ROGERS
INVENTING LOS ALAMOS
Performer By Richard J. Maturi and Mary Buckingham Maturi
The Growth of an Atomic Community By Jon Hunner
A lavishly illustrated look at the life and movie career of the Oklahoma native son
A social history of New Mexico’s “Atomic City” “Will certainly be the standard introduction to New Mexico’s peculiar city for many years to come.” —New Mexico Historical Review
“A marvelous homage to Will Rogers.”—Silents Majority “A well-done piece of scholarship.” —Under Western Skies Among those billions the world over who recognize the name “Will Rogers”and can even quote him, few know that the humorist, political commentator, social critic, and homespun philosopher also starred in dozens of motion pictures—many of them hits—between 1918 and his untimely death in 1935. In fact, Rogers was voted the top box-office draw in 1934, beating out Shirley Temple and Clark Gable. In Will Rogers, Performer, Richard J. Maturi and Mary Buckingham Maturi offer a lively account of Rogers’s formative years and professional career, emphasizing his work in Hollywood. The narrative features Rogers’s own words, lines from his movies, and excerpts from reviews. More than 150 photographs, mostly film stills, are included, as well as a foreword by Will’s son Jim Rogers. Richard J. Maturi and Mary Buckingham Maturi are writers who live and work in the Laramie Range of the Wyoming Rockies. Richard has published several books on investing and personal finance. Together, the Maturis have authored travel books and biographies of silent-screen stars Beverly Bane and Francis X. Bushman.
September 288 Pages 7 x 10 176 b&w illus. 978-0-8061-3760-5 $26.95 Paper
Los Alamos, New Mexico, birthplace of the Atomic Age, is the community that revolutionized modern weaponry and science. An “instant city,” created in 1943, Los Alamos quickly grew to accommodate six thousand people—scientists and experts who came to work in the top-secret laboratories, others drawn by jobs in support industries, and the families. How these people, as a community, faced both the fevered rush to create an atomic bomb and the intensity of the subsequent cold-war era is the focus of Jon Hunner’s fascinating narrative history. Much has been written about scientific developments at Los Alamos, but until this book little has been said about the community that fostered them. Using government records and the personal accounts of early residents, Inventing Los Alamos, traces the evolution of the town during its first fifteen years as home to a national laboratory and documents the town’s creation, the lives of the families who lived there, and the impact of this small community on the Atomic Age. Jon Hunner is Associate Professor and Director of the Public History program at New Mexico State University in Las Cruces. He is co-author of Santa Fe: A Historical Walking Tour and Las Cruces: City of Crosses and has published numerous articles about the American Southwest.
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July
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978-0-8061-3891-6
304 Pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 34 b&w illus., 2 maps $19.95 Paper
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NEW BOOKS
18
Biography
oupress.com
CHARLES GOODNIGHT Father of the Texas Panhandle By William T. Hagan Biography of one of the most important cattlemen of the American West “Fresh and valuable . . . a modern classic on the father of the Texas Panhandle.” —David Dary, author of The Santa Fe Trail Charles Goodnight was a pioneer of the early range cattle industry—an opinionated and profane but energetic and well-liked rancher. Goodnight’s story is now re-examined by William T. Hagan in this brief, authoritative account that considers the role of ranching in general—and Goodnight in particular—in the development of the Texas Panhandle. The first major reassessment of his life in seventy years, Charles Goodnight: Father of the Texas Panhandle traces its subject’s life from hardscrabble farmer to cattle baron, giving close attention to lesser-known aspects of his last thirty years. Goodnight came up in the days when much of Texas was free range and open to occupancy by any cattleman brave enough to stake a claim. Hagan shows how Goodnight learned the cattle business and became one of the most famous ranchers of the Southwest. Hagan also presents a clearer picture than ever before of Goodnight’s business arrangements and investments, including the financial setbacks of his later life. As entertaining as it is informative, Hagan’s account takes readers back to the Palo Duro Canyon and the Staked Plains to share insights into the cattleman’s life—riding the range, fighting grass fires, driving cattle to the nearest railhead— the very stuff of cowboy legend and lore. This fascinating biography enriches our understanding of a Texas icon. OF RELATED INTEREST Charles Goodnight Cowman and Plainsman By J. Evetts Haley 978-0-8061-1453-8 $24.95 Paper Jesse Chisholm Ambassador of the Plains By Stan Hoig 978-0-8061-3688-2 $19.95 Paper
September 168 Pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 10 b&w illus., 3 maps 978-0-8061-3827-5 $29.95(S) Cloth
Volume 21 in the Oklahoma Western Biographies series William T. Hagan is retired as Professor of History at the University of Oklahoma. His numerous books include Taking Indian Lands; Quanah Parker, Comanche Chief; and Theodore Roosevelt and Six Friends of the Indian.
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FALL/WINTER
Memoir/Women
2007
19
NEW BOOKS
WOMEN WHO PIONEERED OKLAHOMA Stories from the WPA Narratives Edited by Terri M. Baker and Connie Oliver Henshaw Foreword by M. Susan Savage Interviews of Oklahoma history’s diverse women They came in land runs and on the Trail of Tears, sometimes with families, sometimes alone. But the women who first came to Oklahoma all had trials to face—and stories to tell. In this stirring collection, the women who settled what would become Oklahoma tell their own stories in their own words. From thousands of interviews conducted by the Works Progress Administration in 1936–37 and preserved in the Indian Pioneer Papers of Oklahoma, editors Terri M. Baker and Connie Oliver Henshaw have selected the words of women from a wide range of socioeconomic groups, ethnic backgrounds, and geographical locations to relate the pioneer experience as it was really lived. Elegantly written, skillfully edited,Women Who Pioneered Oklahoma reflects the everyday will and courage to survive of Oklahoma’s founding mothers. It conveys the violence of a frontier culture set in a landscape of stark beauty where death was always just a heartbeat away. A vital part of the state centennial, theirs is the story of real Oklahoma, writ large—and in a distinctly female hand. Terri M. Baker, a citizen of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, is Professor of English at Northeastern State University, Tahlequah, Oklahoma, where she focuses on American Indian literature. Connie Oliver Henshaw, who researches women of the nineteenth century, is an Instructor in the Department of Languages and Literature in the College of Liberal Arts at Northeastern State University. M. Susan Savage, currently Oklahoma Secretary of State, is the first woman to have served as Tulsa Mayor.
OF RELATED INTEREST Frontier Children By Linda Peavy and Ursula Smith 978-0-8061-3505-2 $19.95 Paper African American Women Confront the West, 1600–2000 By Quintard Taylor and Shirley Ann Wilson Moore 978-0-8061-3524-3 $34.95 Cloth Whose Names Are Unknown A Novel By Sanora Babb Foreword by Lawrence R. Rodger 978-0-8061-3712-4 $14.95 Paper
October 280 Pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 10 b&w illus., 1 map 978-0-8061-3845-9 $29.95(S) Cloth
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NEW BOOKS
20
oupress.com
Biography
THE IRISH GENERAL Thomas Francis Meagher By Paul R. Wylie Story of a controversial Irish revolutionary, Civil War general, and Montana governor “An engaging biography”—James M. McPherson, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Battle Cry of Freedom Irish patriot, Civil War general, frontier governor—Thomas Francis Meagher played key roles in three major historical arenas. Today he is hailed as a hero by some, condemned as a drunkard by others. Paul R. Wylie now offers a definitive biography of this nineteenth-century figure who has long remained an enigma. The Irish General first recalls Meagher’s life from his boyhood and leadership of Young Ireland in the revolution of 1848, to his exile in Tasmania and escape to New York, where he found fame as an orator and as editor of the Irish News. He served in the Civil War—viewing the Union Army as training for a future Irish revolutionary force—and rose to the rank of brigadier general leading the famous Irish Brigade. Wylie traces Meagher’s military career in detail through the Seven Days battles, Antietam, Fredericksburg, and Chancellorsville. Wylie then recounts Meagher’s final years as acting governor of Montana Territory, sorting historical truth from false claims made against him regarding the militia he formed to combat attacking American Indians, and plumbing the mystery surrounding his death. Even as Meagher is lauded in most Irish histories, his statue in front of Montana’s capitol is viewed by some with contempt. The Irish General brings this multitalented but seriously flawed individual to life, offering a balanced picture of the man and a captivating reading experience. OF RELATED INTEREST A Decent, Orderly Lynching The Montana Vigilantes By Frederick Allen 978-0-8061-3637-0 $34.95 Cloth
Paul R. Wylie is an independent researcher and retired attorney living in Bozeman, Montana.
The Uncivil War Irregular Warfare in the Upper South, 1861–1865 By Robert R. Mackey 978-0-8061-3736-0 $19.95 Paper The Civil War in Arizona The Story of the California Volunteers, 1861–1865 By Andrew E. Masich 978-0-8061-3747-6 $32.95(S) Cloth
September 416 Pages 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 45 b&w illus., 4 maps 978-0-8061-3847-3 $29.95(S) Cloth
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FALL/WINTER
Biography
2007
21
NEW BOOKS
WILLIAM F. CODY’S WYOMING EMPIRE The Buffalo Bill Nobody Knows By Robert E. Bonner The story of Cody’s efforts as a town builder and irrigation entrepreneur Celebrated showman of the Old West, William F. “Buffalo Bill” Cody took on another role unknown to most Americans, that of the western land developer and town promoter. In this captivating study, Robert E. Bonner demonstrates that the skills Cody acquired from decades in show business failed to prepare him for the demanding arena of business and finance. Bonner examines Cody’s efforts as president of the Shoshone Irrigation Company to develop the Big Horn Basin through large-scale irrigation and town development. This meticulously researched account shows us a Buffalo Bill preoccupied with making a buck and not at all shy about using his fame to do it. Cody spent huge sums, bullied partners, patronized state officials, and exercised his charm in pursuit of developing the high plains east of Yellowstone National Park. His efforts helped shape the city of Cody and the Big Horn Basin. With the famous Irma Hotel as a cornerstone, he built the first infrastructure of the CodyYellowstone tourist trade and connected his little Wyoming town with the wealth of the East through personal hospitality and travel. Laced with engaging anecdotes and featuring more than twenty photographs, William F. Cody’s Wyoming Empire is a much needed look at an overly mythologized character. There was more to William F. Cody than the Wild West show— and we cannot construct a full picture of the man without understanding his entrepreneurial activities in Wyoming. Robert E. Bonner is Professor Emeritus of History at Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota. His numerous articles have appeared in such journals as the Western Historical Quarterly and Montana The Magazine of Western History.
OF RELATED INTEREST Hostiles? The Lakota Ghost Dance and Buffalo Bill’s Wild West By Sam A. Maddra 978-0-8061-3743-8 $24.95(S) Cloth The Lives and Legends of Buffalo Bill By Don Russell 978-0-8061-1537-5 $24.95 Paper Devil’s Gate Owning the Land, Owning the Story By Tom Rea 978-0-8061-3792-6 $26.95 Cloth
October 368 Pages 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 23 b&w illus., 3 maps 978-0-8061-3829-9 $32.95(S) Cloth
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CHARLES M. RU NEW BOOKS
22
A
Art/Western History
oupress.com
C ATA L O G U E
R A I S
The first comprehensive description and documentation of Russell’s works
OF RELATED INTEREST Charles M. Russell The Life and Legend of America’s Cowboy Artist By John Taliaferro 978-0-8061-3495-6 $19.95 Paper Charles M. Russell By Peter H. Hassrick 978-0-8061-3142-9 $34.95 Paper
SSELL FALL/WINTER
Art/American West
2007
O N NÉ
Edited by B. Byron Price Foreword by Anne Morand Contributions by Brian W. Dippie Peter H. Hassrick Rick Stewart Raphael J. Cristy Ginger K. Renner and B. Byron Price
23
NEW BOOKS
CHARLES M. RUSSELL is our most beloved artist of the American West. His paintings, sketches, sculpture, illustrated letters, and stories are an unequalled legacy. Lavishly illustrated with more than 200 color and black-and-white reproductions of Russell’s greatest works, this beautiful volume features essays by Russell experts and scholars who address important aspects of the artist’s life and career. Inside the book is a unique key code that allows purchasers to access a private online catalogue of more than 4,000 works Russell created and signed during his lifetime. Original owners of the book will have unlimited access to the site once a user name and password have been created. The online catalogue, which includes an enlargeable image of each work, is fully searchable. In addition, each entry includes the catalogue number, title, medium, dimensions, and, when available, the inscription, credit line, illustration, provenance, exhibition history, and bibliography. The catalogue will be updated on an ongoing basis as new information becomes available or additional works are found. Together, the book and the catalogue will serve as an essential reference for museums, galleries, collectors, scholars, and anyone who appreciates the art of Charles M. Russell. The result of more than a decade of research and scholarship, Charles M. Russell: A Catalogue Raisonné is published in cooperation with the Charles M. Russell Center for the Study of Art of the American West at the University of Oklahoma and with the C. M. Russell Museum in Great Falls, Montana. Volume 1 in The Charles M. Russell Center Series on Art and Photography of the American West B. Byron Price is Director of the Charles M. Russell Center and Charles Marion Russell Chair of Art History, University of Oklahoma. Anne Morand is Chief Executive Officer of the C. M. Russell Museum in Great Falls, Montana. Brian W. Dippie is Professor of History at the University of Victoria, British Columbia. Peter H. Hassrick is Director of the Institute of Western American Art, Denver Museum of Art. Rick Stewart is Senior Curator of Western Paintings and Sculpture, The Amon Carter Museum, Fort Worth, Texas. Raphael James Cristy is an award-winning historian and actor. Ginger K. Renner is a longtime collector and writer on Russell. November 352 Pages 9 7/8 x 12 160 color and 65 b&w illus 978-0-8061-3836-7 $125.00(S) Cloth
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NEW BOOKS
24
Criminals & Outlaws
oupress.com
DEADLY DOZEN Forgotten Gunfighters of the Old West, Volume 2 By Robert K. DeArment Overlooked shooters who made their deadly mark on the Old West Think gunfighter, and Wyatt Earp or Billy the Kid may come to mind, but what of Jim Moon? Joel Fowler? Zack Light? A host of other figures helped forge the gunfighter persona, but their stories have been lost to time. In a sequel to his Deadly Dozen, celebrated western historian Robert K. DeArment now offers more biographical portraits of lesser-known gunfighters—men who perhaps weren’t glorified in legend or song, but who were rightfully notorious in their day. DeArment has tracked down stories of gunmen from throughout the West— characters you won’t find in any of today’s western history encyclopedias but whose careers are colorfully described here. Photos of the men and telling quotations from primary sources make these characters come alive. In giving these men their due, DeArment takes readers back to the gunfighter culture spawned in part by the upheavals of the Civil War, to a time when deadly duels were part of the social fabric of frontier towns and the Code of the West was real. His vignettes offer telling insights into conditions on the frontier that created the gunfighters of legend. These overlooked shooters never won national headlines but made their own contributions to the blood and thunder of the Old West: people less than legends, but all the more fascinating because they were real. Readers who enjoyed DeArment’s Deadly Dozen will find this book equally captivating—as gripping as a showdown, twelve times over.
OF RELATED INTEREST Deadly Dozen Twelve Forgotten Gunfighters of the Old West By Robert K. DeArment 978-0-8061-3559-5 $29.95 (S) Cloth
Robert K. DeArment is the author of numerous books about law and order in the American West, including the original Deadly Dozen: Twelve Forgotten Gunfighters of the Old West and Ballots and Bullets: The Bloody County Seat Wars of Kansas.
Bravo of the Brazos John Larn of Fort Griffin, Texas By Robert K. DeArment 978-0-8061-3714-8 $19.95 Paper Bat Masterson By Robert K. DeArment 978-0-8061-2221-2 $24.95 Paper
October 416 Pages 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 15 b&w illus. 978-0-8061-3863-3 $29.95(S) Cloth
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FALL/WINTER
Military History/Africa
2007
25
NEW BOOKS
VOLUNTEERS ON THE VELD Britain’s Citizen-Soldiers and the South African War, 1899–1902 By Stephen M. Miller How England’s volunteers got more than they bargained for in the Boer War When the Second Boer War erupted in South Africa in 1899, Great Britain was confident that victory would come quickly and decisively. Instead, the war lasted for three grueling years. To achieve final victory, the British government was forced to depend not only on its Regular Army but also on a large volunteer force. This book spotlights Britain’s “citizen army” to show who these volunteers were, why they enlisted, how they were trained—and how they quickly became disillusioned when they found themselves committed not to the supposed glories of conventional battle but instead to a prolonged guerrilla war. In Volunteers on the Veld, Stephen M. Miller focuses on the connection between Britain’s auxiliary forces—volunteers, militia, and yeomanry—and its imperial mission during the late Victorian era, looking especially at why the British war effort came to depend on their performance. Miller examines motivations for enlistment, the use of citizen-soldiers in guerrilla warfare, and the effects of combat on the soldiers themselves, weaving together the sense of national emergency, the influence of popular culture, and images of manhood that propelled so many Britons into the ranks of volunteers. By revisiting one of the most significant guerrilla wars of the modern age—and one of the earliest examples of the use of modern media to promote mobilization for a foreign war—Volunteers on the Veld lends fresh insight into British imperial warfare while suggesting unmistakable parallels between these citizen-soldiers and today’s American volunteers in Iraq. Volume 12 in the Campaigns & Commanders series Stephen M. Miller is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Maine. He is the author of Lord Methuen and the British Army: Failure and Redemption in South Africa.
OF RELATED INTEREST Blood in the Argonne The “Lost Battalion” of World War I By Alan D. Gaff 978-0-8061-3696-7 $32.95 (S) Cloth William Harding Carter and the American Army A Soldier’s Story By Ronald G. Machoian 978-0-8061-3746-9 $39.95(S) Cloth
December 248 Pages 6x9 14 b&w illus., 4 maps 978-0-8061-3864-0 $29.95(S) Cloth
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NEW BOOKS
26
Languages/American Indian
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Original Paperback
CHOCTAW LANGUAGE AND CULTURE Chahta Anumpa Volume 2 By Marcia Haag and Henry Willis Stories of Choctaw lives convey lessons in language Building on the foundations laid by the first volume of Choctaw Language and Culture, this follow-up text presents a more advanced linguistic study of Oklahoma Choctaw, accompanied by short stories and anecdotes written by Choctaws in their native language. The book is organized around twelve texts with translations, each followed by a grammar lesson, a vocabulary section that acquaints students with new words, a word-study section, and exercises. The authors present such topics as idioms, ways to say “or,” negative conditionals, and compound tenses. Particularly important is the subject of negation, which permeates Choctaw at all levels, and the concept of definiteness. The authors also demonstrate the many ways a single Choctaw word can be modified to yield subtle differences in meaning. Exercises encourage the student to think about how the language works rather than relying on rote memorization. Volume 2 of Choctaw Language and Culture is designed to help teachers and students alike further their understanding of Choctaw by working with and mastering grammatically complex examples of its use. It marks the first such advanced textbook of Choctaw as well as the first easily available reference grammar for teachers. By including actual voices of Choctaw people describing their own lives, it also represents a unique new repository of Choctaw culture. Contributors include Jay McAlvain, Phillip Carroll Morgan, Grayson Noley, Bill Nowlin, Lois Pugh, Eveline Steele, and Tim Tingle.
OF RELATED INTEREST Choctaw Language and Culture Chahta Anumpa By Marcia Haag and Henry Willis 978-0-8061-3339-3 $29.95 Paper
Marcia Haag is Associate Professor of Linguistics at the University of Oklahoma. Henry Willis, a native speaker of Choctaw, is a Choctaw community teacher. Both Haag and Willis are linguistic consultants for the Language Program, Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma.
Chahta Anumpa A Grammar of the Choctaw Language By Arlen L. Fowler and Marcia Haag 978-0-8061-3379-9 $29.95 CD Beginning Creek Mvskoke Emponvkv By Pamela Innes, Linda Alexander, and Bertha Tilkins 978-0-8061-3583-0 $29.95(S) Paper
December 128 Pages 6x9 10 b&w illus. 978-0-8061-3855-8 $24.95(S) Paper
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FALL/WINTER
History/American Indian
2007
27
NEW BOOKS
THE CHOCTAWS IN OKLAHOMA From Tribe to Nation, 1855–1970 By Clara Sue Kidwell Foreword by Lindsay G. Robertson The story of a people overcoming colonization The road from dispossessed people to successful nation was a long one, but for the Choctaws it has been worth the journey. This book examines how one tribe moved beyond setbacks to establish a powerful modern tribal government. The Choctaws in Oklahoma begins with the Choctaws’ removal from Mississippi to Indian Territory in the 1830s and then traces the history of the tribe’s subsequent efforts to retain and expand its rights and to reassert tribal sovereignty in the late twentieth century. As Kidwell explains, Choctaws adapted to the very structures imposed on them by their colonizers: courts and laws. Tribal politicians quickly learned to use the rhetoric of dependency on the government, but they also demanded justice in the form of fulfillment of their treaty rights, and the Choctaw Nation confronted the government as a legal adversary to achieve its own ends. The Choctaws have adroitly negotiated with the United States and created the Choctaw Nation that exists today. The Choctaws’ story illuminates a key point in contemporary scholarship on the history of American Indians: that they were not passive victims of colonization and did not assimilate quietly into American society. The Choctaws in Oklahoma illustrates one tribe’s remarkable success in asserting its sovereignty and establishing a national identity in the face of seemingly insurmountable legal obstacles. Volume 2 in the American Indian Law and Policy Series Clara Sue Kidwell is Director Emerita of the Native American Studies program and Professor of History at the University of Oklahoma. She is the author of numerous articles and books, including Choctaws and Missionaries in Mississippi, 1818–1918. Lindsay G. Robertson, Professor of Law at the University of Oklahoma, is author of Conquest by Law: How the Discovery of America Dispossessed Indigenous Peoples of Their Lands.
OF RELATED INTEREST Choctaws and Missionaries in Mississippi, 1818–1918 By Clara Sue Kidwell 978-0-8061-2914-3 $19.95 Paper Contrary Neighbors Southern Plains and Removed Indians in Indian Territory By David La Vere 978-0-8061-3299-0 $21.95 Paper The Rise and Fall of the Choctaw Republic 2nd Edition By Angie Debo 978-0-8061-1247-3 $19.95 Paper
August 344 Pages 6x9 9 b&w illus., 4 maps 978-0-8061-3826-8 $34.95(S) Cloth
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NEW BOOKS
Biography
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MATILDA COXE STEVENSON Pioneering Anthropologist By Darlis A. Miller Foreword by Louis A. Hieb A woman in a man’s world among the Pueblos of the Southwest The first woman anthropologist to work in the Southwest, Matilda Coxe Stevenson (1849–1915) helped define the contours of anthropological research at the turn of the twentieth century. In this first book-length biography of Stevenson, Darlis A. Miller challenges older interpretations of her subject’s life and work as she traces one woman’s quest for professional recognition in the face of social constraints. Stevenson worked for more than a quarter century with the Bureau of American Ethnology and was the only professional woman to hold a full-time position there. Despite the obstacles posed by gender bias, she earned recognition for her pioneering ethnographies of the Zia and Zuni Indians. Miller also examines Stevenson’s field techniques in the context of the anthropology of her day, as well as the personal traits that contributed to her professional success but caused some colleagues to focus more on her personality than her accomplishments. As Miller shows, Stevenson’s work fostered a better understanding of Pueblo cultures and helped to undermine racial stereotypes. This book gives her due recognition, lending compelling insight into a remarkable career while offering new views of the earliest field studies of Puebloan peoples.
OF RELATED INTEREST Mary Hallock Foote Author-Illustrator of the American West By Darlis A. Miller 978-0-8061-3397-3 $21.95 Cloth
November 304 Pages 6x9 14 b&w illus., 2 maps 978-0-8061-3832-9 $29.95(S) Cloth
Darlis A. Miller, Professor Emerita of History at New Mexico State University, is the author of numerous books on the Southwest, including Soldiers and Settlers, Captain Jack Crawford, and Mary Hallock Foote: Author-Illustrator of the American West. Louis A. Hieb is former Director for the Center for Southwest Research, University of New Mexico. He coedited Travels and Researches in Native North America, 1882–1883 and has written several articles on the Hopi, Navajo, and Zuni.
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History/Latin America
2007
29
NEW BOOKS
INDIAN CONQUISTADORS Indigenous Allies in the Conquest of Mesoamerica Edited by Laura E. Matthew and Michel R. Oudijk Reassesses the first invasion of the New World The conquest of the New World would hardly have been possible if the invading Spaniards had not allied themselves with the indigenous population. This book takes into account the role of native peoples as active agents in the Conquest through a review of new sources and more careful analysis of known but understudied materials that demonstrate the overwhelming importance of native allies in both conquest and colonial control. In Indian Conquistadors, leading scholars offer the most comprehensive look to date at native participation in the conquest of Mesoamerica. The contributors examine pictorial, archaeological, and documentary evidence spanning three centuries, including little-known eyewitness accounts from both Spanish and native documents, paintings (lienzos) and maps (mapas) from the colonial period, and a new assessment of imperialism in the region before the Spanish arrival.
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This new research shows that the Tlaxcalans, the most famous allies of the Spanish, were far from alone. Not only did native lords throughout Mesoamerica supply arms, troops, and tactical guidance, but tens of thousands of warriors— Nahuas, Mixtecs, Zapotecs, Mayas, and others—spread throughout the region to participate with the Spanish in a common cause. By offering a more balanced account of this dramatic period, this book calls into question traditional narratives that emphasize indigenous peoples’ roles as auxiliaries rather than as conquistadors in their own right. Enhanced with twelve maps and more than forty illustrations, Indian Conquistadors opens a vital new line of research and challenges our understanding of this important era. Laura E. Matthew is Assistant Professor of History at Marquette University, Milwaukee. Michel R. Oudijk is a Researcher at the Institute of Philological Investigations, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico City, D.F.
OF RELATED INTEREST Mexico and the Spanish Conquest Second Edition By Ross Hassig 978-0-8061-3793-3 $14.95 (S) Paper The History of the Indies of New Spain By Fray Diego Durán 978-0-8061-2649-4 $45.00 Cloth The Conquest of America The Question of the Other By Tzvetan Todorov 978-0-8061-3137-5 $19.95 Paper
November 320 Pages 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 43 b&w illus., 12 maps 978-0-8061-3854-1 $45.00(S) Cloth
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Biography
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MR. JEFFERSON’S HAMMER William Henry Harrison and the Origins of American Indian Policy By Robert M. Owens How Harrison set the pattern for Indian treaty making Often remembered as the president who died shortly after taking office, William Henry Harrison remains misunderstood by most Americans. Before becoming the ninth president of the United States in 1841, Harrison was instrumental in shaping the early years of westward expansion. Robert M. Owens now explores that era through the lens of Harrison’s career, providing a new synthesis of his role in the political development of Indiana Territory and in shaping Indian policy in the Old Northwest. Owens traces Harrison’s political career as secretary of the Northwest Territory, territorial delegate to Congress, and governor of Indiana Territory, as well as his military leadership and involvement with Indian relations. Thomas Jefferson, who was president during the first decade of the nineteenth century, found in Harrison the ideal agent to carry out his administration’s ruthless campaign to extinguish Indian land titles. More than a study of the man, Mr. Jefferson’s Hammer is a cultural biography of his fellow settlers, telling how this first generation of post-Revolutionary Americans realized their vision of progress and expansionism. It surveys the military, political, and social world of the early Ohio Valley and shows that Harrison’s attitudes and behavior reflected his Virginia background and its eighteenth-century notions as much as his frontier milieu.
OF RELATED INTEREST The Fox Wars The Mesquakie Challenge to New France By R. David Edmunds and Joseph L. Peyser 978-0-8061-2551-0 $29.95 Cloth The Potawatomis Keepers of the Fire By R. David Edmunds 978-0-8061-2069-0 $24.95 Paper
To this day, we live with the echoes of Harrison’s proclamations, the boundaries set by his treaties, and the ramifications of his actions. Mr. Jefferson’s Hammer offers a much needed reappraisal of Harrison’s impact on the nation’s development and key lessons for understanding American sentiments in the early republic. Robert M. Owens is Assistant Professor of History at Wichita State University, Kansas.
Tecumseh’s Last Stand By John Sugden 978-0-8061-2242-7 $19.95 Paper
October 344 Pages 6x9 12 b&w illus., 8 maps 978-0-8061-3842-8 $34.95(S) Cloth
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American Indian/History
2007
31
NEW BOOKS
THE SEMINOLE FREEDMEN A History By Kevin Mulroy Captures the distinct identity and history of the Seminole maroons Popularly known as “Black Seminoles,” descendents of the Seminole freedmen of Indian Territory are a unique American cultural group. Now Kevin Mulroy examines the long history of these people to show that this label denies them their rightful distinctiveness. To correct misconceptions of the historical relationship between Africans and Seminole Indians, he traces the emergence of Seminoleblack identity and community from their eighteenth-century Florida origins to the present day. Arguing that the Seminole freedmen are neither Seminoles, Africans, nor “black Indians,” Mulroy proposes that they are maroon descendants who inhabit their own racial and cultural category, which he calls “Seminole maroon.” Mulroy plumbs the historical record to show clearly that, although allied with the Seminoles, these maroons formed independent and autonomous communities that dealt with European American society differently than either Indians or African Americans did. Mulroy describes the freedmen’s experiences as runaways from southern plantations, slaves of American Indians, participants in the Seminole Wars, and emigrants to the West. He then recounts their history during the Civil War, Reconstruction, enrollment and allotment under the Dawes Act, and early Oklahoma statehood. He also considers freedmen relations with Seminoles in Oklahoma during the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Although freedmen and Seminoles enjoy a partially shared past, this book shows that the freedmen’s history and culture are unique and entirely their own. Volume 2 in the Race and Culture in the American West Series Kevin Mulroy is Associate Executive Director for Research Collections and Services at the University of Southern California and author of Freedom on the Border: The Seminole Maroons in Florida, the Indian Territory, Coahuila, and Texas.
OF RELATED INTEREST The Seminoles By Edwin C. McReynolds 978-0-8061-1255-8 $21.95 Paper Indian Removal The Emigration of the Five Civilized Tribes of Indians By Grant Foreman 978-0-8061-1172-8 $19.95 Paper The Five Civilized Tribes By Grant Foreman 978-0-8061-0923-7 $19.95 Paper
November 480 Pages 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 39 b&w illus., 4 maps 978-0-8061-3865-7 $36.95(S) Cloth
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32
American Indian/Education
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SCOTTISH HIGHLANDERS AND NATIVE AMERICANS Indigenous Education in the Eighteenth-Century Atlantic World By Margaret Connell Szasz Two indigenous cultures encounter Scottish educators in the eighteenth century “A masterful performance and a truly original study.”—David Wallace Adams, author of Education for Extinction: American Indians and the Boarding School Experience, 1875–1928 The Society in Scotland for the Propagation of Christian Knowledge (SSPCK) was founded in 1709 by Scottish Lowlanders for the education of Highlanders: specifically to convert them from the Gaelic language to English, from the Episcopal faith to Presbyterianism, and from latent Jacobitism to loyalty to the crown. In a transatlantic translation of this effort, the “Scottish Society” also established itself in the New World to educate and assimilate Iroquois, Algonquin, and southeastern Native peoples. In this first book-length examination of the SSPCK, Margaret Connell Szasz explores the origins of the Scottish Society’s policies of cultural colonialism and their influence on two disparate frontiers. Drawing intriguing parallels between the treatment of Highland Scots and of Native Americans, she incorporates multiple perspectives on the cultural encounter, juxtaposing the attitudes of Highlanders and Lowlanders, English colonials and Native peoples, while giving voice to the Society’s pupils and graduates, its schoolmasters, and religious leaders.
OF RELATED INTEREST American Indian Education A History By Jon Reyhner and Jeanne Eder 978-0-8061-3783-4 $19.95(S) Paper Scots in the North American West, 1790–1917 By Fernec Morton Szasz 978-0-8061-3253-2 $29.95 Cloth Battlefield and Classroom Four Decades with the American Indian, 1867–1904 By Richard Henry Pratt Edited by Robert M. Utley 978-0-8061-3603-5 $24.95(S) Paper
October 304 Pages 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 27 b&w illus., 8 maps 978-0-8061-3861-9 $34.95(S) Cloth
Featuring more than two dozen illustrations, Scottish Highlanders and Native Americans brims with intriguing comparisons and insights into two cultures on the cusp of modernity. It is a benchmark in emerging studies of comparative education and a major contribution to the growing literature of cross-cultural encounters. Margaret Connell Szasz is Professor of History at the University of New Mexico. Her publications include Education and the American Indian: The Road to SelfDetermination since 1928; Indian Education in the American Colonies, 1607– 1723; and (as editor) Between Indian and White Worlds: The Cultural Broker.
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Latin America/Anthropology
2007
33
NEW BOOKS
Original Paperback
HEALTH CARE IN MAYA GUATEMALA Confronting Medical Pluralism in a Developing Country Edited by Walter Randolph Adams and John P. Hawkins Creating more enlightened health care for traditional cultures When the traditional meets the modern, nowhere is the impact felt as personally as in the realm of health care. Because practitioners trained in Western science tend to ignore traditional medicine in developing countries, conflict is inevitable. Health Care in Maya Guatemala examines medical systems and institutions in three K’iche’ Maya communities to reveal the conflicts between indigenous medical care and the Guatemalan biomedical system. The editors and contributors show how people in this rapidly modernizing society think about traditional practices—and reveal that health conditions in traditional communities deteriorate over time as long-standing medical practices erode in the face of Western encroachment. The contributors first consider cultural, institutional, and behavioral aspects of health care in Guatemala. Then they look closely at the nature and treatment of spe-cific health issues, such as dentistry and mental health—especially depression. Finally they provide new insight on midwifery, nutrition, ethnomedicine, and other topics. As a whole, the volume proposes steps toward a health care system more accessible to Mayas, incorporating K’iche’ concepts with Western thought. Representing trends seen throughout the world, it shows the necessity of cultural understanding if poor people are to have access to medicine that combines the best of both local tradition and international biomedicine. Although Western medicine continues to ignore the importance of local culture in its attempt to be “scientific,” this book makes a strong argument for giving tradition its due.
OF RELATED INTEREST Roads to Change in Maya Guatemala A Field School Approach to Understanding the K’iche’ By John P. Hawkins and Walter Randolph Adams 978-0-8061-3730-8 $16.95(S) Paper
Walter Randolph Adams is Adjunct Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah. John P. Hawkins is Professor of Anthropology at Brigham Young University. Coeditors of Roads to Change in Maya Guatemala, Adams and Hawkins have codirected their Guatemalan field school among the K’iche’ Mayas since 1995. November 288 Pages 6x9 21 b&w illus. 978-0-8061-3859-6 $19.95(S) Paper
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34
History/New Mexico
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New to OU Press
ROOTS OF RESISTANCE A History of Land Tenure in New Mexico By Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz Foreword by Simon J. Ortiz An updated edition of a seminal work on the history of land ownership in the Southwest “Underscores the centrality of land questions for this vital and diverse section of the United States—questions that continue to energize public discourse, state politics, and cultural reflections.”—Juan Gómez-Quiñones, author of Roots of Chicano Politics, 1600–1940 In New Mexico—once a Spanish colony, then part of Mexico—Pueblo Indians and descendants of Spanish- and Mexican-era settlers still think of themselves as distinct peoples, each with a dynamic history. At the core of these persistent cultural identities is each group’s historical relationship to the others and to the land, a connection that changed dramatically when the United States wrested control of the region from Mexico in 1848.
OF RELATED INTEREST Red Dirt Growing Up Okie By Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz 978-0-8061-3775-9 $14.95 Paper
In Roots of Resistance—now offered in an updated paperback edition—Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz provides a history of land ownership in northern New Mexico from 1680 to the present. She shows how indigenous and Mexican farming communities adapted and preserved their fundamental democratic social and economic institutions, despite losing control of their land to capitalist entrepreneurs and becoming part of a low-wage labor force. In a new final chapter, Dunbar-Ortiz applies the lessons of this history to recent conflicts in New Mexico over ownership and use of land and control of minerals, timber, and water. Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, a writer, teacher, historian, and social activist, is Professor Emeritus of Ethnic Studies and Women’s Studies at California State University, East Bay, and author of many articles and books, including Blood on the Border: A Memoir of the Contra War and Red Dirt: Growing Up Okie. Simon J. Ortiz, an Acoma Pueblo Indian, is a poet, lecturer, and writer whose collection of poems Going for the Rain won a Pushcart Prize.
September 224 Pages 6x9 1 map 978-0-8061-3833-6 $19.95(S) Paper
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History/Europe
History/Egypt
New to OU Press
New to OU Press
THE REIGN OF CLEOPATRA
THE TROJAN WAR
By Stanley M. Burstein An engaging, accessible biography of the legendary Egyptian queen, with source documents Ambitious, intelligent, and desired by powerful men, Cleopatra VII came to power at a time when Roman and Egyptian interests increasingly concerned the same object: Egypt itself. Cleopatra lived and reigned at the center of this complex and persistent power struggle. Her legacy has since lost much of its former political significance, as she has come to symbolize instead the potent force of female sexuality and power. In this engaging and multifaceted account, Stanley M. Burstein displays Cleopatra in the full manifold brilliance of the multiple cultures, countries, and people that surrounded her throughout her compelling life, and in so doing develops a stunning picture of a legendary queen and a deeply historic reign. Designed as an accessible introduction to Cleopatra VII and her time, The Reign of Cleopatra offers readers and researchers an appealing mix of descriptive chapters, biographical sketches, and annotated primary documents. The narrative chapters conclude with a discussion of Cleopatra’s significance as a person, a queen, and a symbol. A glossary and annotated bibliography round out the volume. Stanley M. Burstein is Professor Emeritus of History at California State University, Los Angeles, and coauthor of Ancient Greece: A Brief History.
December 224 Pages 6x9 10 b&w illus., 2 maps 978-0-8061-3871-8 $16.95(S) Paper
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NEW BOOKS
By Carol G. Thomas and Craig Conant Surveys the historical underpinnings of the Heroic Age in ancient Greek tradition Different as the Trojan War was to Greeks and Romans, the two peoples united in an identical longing for a heroism that was attainable in the present only by reaching out for an impos��������������� ������������� sible past. Carol G. Thomas and Craig Conant’s broad and varied account of the Trojan War allows readers to investigate the archaeological and historical foundations that underlie the epic poems featuring Achilles and Aeneas, and to examine how the poems altered understanding of the war for the many cultures and civilizations touched by their narrative power.
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Conceived as an introduction to this critical event in the Western tradition, The Trojan War offers readers and researchers an engaging mixture of descriptive chapters, biographical sketches, and annotated primary documents. Also provided are an annotated bibliography and index. Carol G. Thomas is Professor of History at the University of Washington, co-author of Citadel to City-State: The Transformation of Greece, 1200–700 BCE and author of Progress into the Past: The Rediscovery of Mycenaean Civilization. Craig Conant is co-author with Carol G. Thomas of From Citadel to City-State.
December 224 Pages 6x9 9 b&w illus., 2 maps 978-0-8061-3874-9 $16.95(S) Paper
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Some of Tim’s Stories By S. E. Hinton 978-0-8061-3835-0 $19.95 Cloth
After Eden A Novel By Valerie Miner 978-0-8061-3814-5 $24.95 Cloth
Way Down Yonder in the Indian Nation Writings from America’s Heartland By Michael Wallis 978-0-8061-3824-4 $16.95 Paper
recent releases
Mr. Ambassador Warrior for Peace By Edward J. Perkins and Connie Cronley 978-0-8061-3767-4 $39.95 Cloth
An Autumn Remembered Bud Wilkinson’s Legendary ’56 Sooners By Gary T. King 978-0-8061-3786-5 $14.95 Paper
Alternative Oklahoma Contrarian Views of the Sooner State Edited by Davis D. Joyce 978-0-8061-3819-0 $19.95 Paper
Quick Change By Jay Cronley 978-0-8061-3773-5 $14.95 Paper
The Man Who Could Fly and Other Stories By Rudolfo Anaya 978-0-8061-3738-4 $19.95 Cloth
George Miksch Sutton Artist, Scientist, and Teacher By Jerome A. Jackson 978-0-8061-3745-2 $29.95 Cloth
Light and Variable A Year of Celebrations, Holidays, Recipes, and Emily Dickinson By Connie Cronley 978-0-8061-3788-9 $16.95 Paper
Party Wars Polarization and the Politics of National Policy Making By Barbara Sinclair 978-0-8061-3779-7 $21.95 Paper
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Where Custer Fell Photographs of the Little Bighorn Battlefield Then and Now By James S. Brust, Brian C. Pohanka, and Sandy Barnard 978-0-8061-3834-3 $24.95 Paper
By His Own Hand? The Mysterious Death of Meriwether Lewis Edited by John D. W. Guice 978-0-8061-3851-0 $14.95 Paper
Riding for the Brand 150 Years of Cowden Ranching By Michael Pettit 978-0-8061-3718-6 $29.95 Cloth
Uniforms, Arms, and Equipment The U.S. Army on the Western Frontier, 1880–1892 Volume 1: Headgear, Clothing, and Footwear By Douglas C. McChristian 2-Volume Set $95.00 Cloth 978-0-8061-9961-0 Volume I $60.00 Cloth 978-0-8061-3789-6
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Uniforms, Arms, and Equipment The U.S. Army on the Western Frontier, 1880–1892 Volume 2: Weapons and Accouterments By Douglas C. McChristian 2-Volume Set $95.00 Cloth 978-0-8061-9961-0 Volume II $60.00 Cloth 978-0-8061-3790-2
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John Sutter A Life on the North American Frontier By Albert L. Hurtado 978-0-8061-3772-8 $34.95 Cloth
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Historical Atlas of Oklahoma Fourth Edition By Charles Robert Goins and Danney Goble 978-0-8061-3482-6 $39.95 Cloth
Smoke Jumping on the Western Fire Line Conscientious Objectors during World War II By Mark Matthews 978-0-8061-3766-7 $29.95 Cloth
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best-selling paperbacks
Techniques of the Selling Writer By Dwight V. Swain 978-0-8061-1191-9 $24.95 Paper
The Chuck Wagon Cookbook Recipes from the Ranch and Range for Today’s Kitchen By B. Byron Price 978-0-8061-3654-7 $19.95 Paper
Party Wars Polarization and the Politics of National Policy Making By Barbara Sinclair 978-0-8061-3779-7 $21.95 Paper
A Lady’s Life in the Rocky Mountains By Isabella L. Bird 978-0-8061-1328-9 $8.95 Paper
The American Frontier Pioneers, Settlers, and Cowboys 1800–1899 By William C. Davis 978-0-8061-3129-0 $24.95 Paper
Encyclopedia of Western Gunfighters By Bill O’Neal 978-0-8061-2335-6 $24.95 Paper
Ojibwa Warrior Dennis Banks and the Rise of the American Indian Movement By Dennis Banks 978-0-8061-3691-2 $19.95 · Paper
Duke The Life and Images of John Wayne By Ronald L. Davis 978-0-8061-3329-4 $14.95 Paper
Custer Died for Your Sins An Indian Manifesto By Vine Deloria, Jr. 978-0-8061-2129-1 $19.95 Paper
Ancient Rome An Introductory History By Paul A. Zoch 978-0-8061-3287-7 $21.95 Paper
Native American Weapons By Colin F. Taylor 978-0-8061-3716-2 $14.95 Paper
American Indians Answers to Today’s Questions By Jack Utter 978-0-8061-3309-6 $21.95 Paper
Warfare in the Classical World An Illustrated Encyclopedia of Weapons, Warriors, and Warfare in the Ancient Civilizations of Greece and Rome By John Warry 978-0-8061-2794-1 $29.95 Paper
Diminished Democracy From Membership to Management in American Civic Life By Theda Skocpol 978-0-8061-3627-1 $24.95 Paper
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FALL/WINTER
INDEX
2007 A Adams/Hawkins, Health Care in Maya Guatemala 33
B
41
Lauck, Daschle vs. Thune 4 Luvaas, Working Man’s Apocrypha, A 12
M
Baby Doe Tabor, Temple 9 Baker/Henshaw, Women Who Pioneered Oklahoma 19 Billy The Kid Reader, The, Nolan 7 Bjorkman, Verne Sankey 6 Bonner, William F. Cody’s Wyoming Empire 21 Books on Trial, Wiegand/Wiegand 5 Bright, Native American Placenames 16 Burstein, Reign of Cleopatra, The 35
Matthew/Oudijk, Indian Conquistadors 29 Matthews, Great Day to Fight Fire, A 8 Matilda Coxe Stevenson, Miller 28 Maturi/Maturi, Will Rogers, Performer 17 Miller, Matilda Coxe Stevenson 28 Miller, Volunteers on the Veld 25 Momaday, Three Plays 2 Mr. Jefferson’s Hammer, Owens 30 Muhammad, Gabriel 1 Mulroy, Seminole Freedmen, The 31
C
N
Chamberlain, Victorio 10 Charles Goodnight, Hagan 18 Charles M. Russell, Price 22 Cherokee Medicine Man, Conley 16 Choctaw Language and Culture, Haag/Wills 26 Choctaws in Oklahoma, The, Kidwell 27 Conley, Cherokee Medicine Man 16
Nolan, Billy The Kid Reader, The 7 Native American Placenames, Bright 16 Northern Cheyenne Album, A, Liberty 14
D
R
Daschle vs. Thune, Lauck 4 Deadly Dozen, DeArment 24 DeArment, Deadly Dozen 24 Dunbar-Ortiz, Roots of Resistance 34
Reign of Cleopatra, The, Burstein 35 Roots of Resistance, Dunbar-Ortiz 34
E Einolf, George Thomas 13
G Gabriel, Muhammad 1 Gall, Larson 11 George Thomas, Einolf 13 Great Day to Fight Fire, A, Matthews 8
H Haag/Willis, Choctaw Language and Culture 26 Hagan, Charles Goodnight 18 Health Care in Maya Guatemala, Adams/Hawkins 33 Hendricks, International Encyclopedia of Horse Breeds 15 Hunner, Inventing Los Alamos 17
I Indian Conquistadors, Matthew/Oudijk 29 International Encyclopedia of Horse Breeds, Hendricks 15 Inventing Los Alamos, Hunner 17 Irish General, The, Wylie 20
K Kidwell, Choctaws in Oklahoma, The 27
L Larson, Gall 11 Liberty, Northern Cheyenne Album,
A 14
COWBOY AND LAWMAN–TURNED–OUTLAW TOM TUCKER (RIGHT) WITH HIS PAL BILLY WILSON. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY ARIZONA HISTORICAL SOCIETY, TUCSON.
O Owens, Mr. Jefferson’s Hammer 30
P Price, Charles M. Russell 22
S Scottish Highlanders and Native Americans, Szasz 32 Seminole Freedmen, The, Mulroy 31 Szasz, Scottish Highlanders and Native Americans 32
T Taylor/Dial-Driver/Burrage/EmmonsFeatherston, Voices from the Heartland 3 Temple, Baby Doe Tabor 9 Thomas/Conant, Trojan War, The 35 Three Plays, Momaday 2 Trojan War, The, Thomas/Conant 35
V Verne Sankey, Bjorkman 6 Victorio, Chamberlain 10 Voices from the Heartland, Taylor/DialDriver/Burrage/Emmons-Featherston 3 Volunteers on the Veld, Miller 25
W Wiegand/Wiegand, Books on Trial 5 Will Rogers, Performer, Maturi/Maturi 17 William F. Cody’s Wyoming Empire, Bonner 21 Women Who Pioneered Oklahoma, Baker/Henshaw 19 Working Man’s Apocrypha, A, Luvaas 12 Wylie, Irish General, The 20
Islam’s First Great General By Richard A. Gabriel 978-0-8061-3860-2 $24.95 Cloth
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Mann Gulch, 1949 By Mark Matthews 978-0-8061-3857-2 $24.95 Cloth Voices from the Heartland Edited by Carolyn Anne Taylor, Emily Dial-
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Driver, Carole Burrage, and Sally EmmonsFeatherston 978-0-8061-3858-7 $19.95 Cloth Baby Doe Tabor The Madwoman in the Cabin By Judy Nolte Temple 978-0-8061-3825-1 $24.95 Cloth
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