2010-2011 SDSHS Press Catalogue

Page 1

P u b l i s h i n g S o u t h D a ko t a ’ s R i c h H e r i t a g e

South Dakota

State Historical Society Press 2010-2011 Catalog of Books


As digital technology has

The Prairie Tale Series also has

New Books / 2, 4, 6–7, 13, 15

social media has become increas-

ented website, www.prairie-tale.

Award-winner / 9–12, 14, 16, 18–22

advanced in recent years and

ingly part of our lives, the South

its own dedicated, children-ori-

com. This website offers a multi-

Dakota State Historical Society

media experience, with games,

times. We can be accessed online

a parent/teacher page that offers

(SDSHS) Press has moved with the from a variety of sources. The main website for the Press is

www.sdshspress.com. There, you will find information on our

books and journal issues, news, special Internet promotions,

memberships, secure online shopping, information for prospective

music, sound effects, videos, and useful information to help integrate the Prairie Tales into

young readers’ lives. This year we have introduced a forum to the website. Visitors to the site can now log in and share their

American Indian / 2, 7–8, 11–13, 15, 19, 21 Biographies & Memoirs / 4, 9, 16, 17, 20, 22

Deadwood & the Black Hills / 4, 10–11, 14, 16-18, 22 For Young Readers / 11–15, 19

Historical Preservation Series / 18, 20

Nature & Environment / 4, 8, 10, 14–15, 20, 21 Politics / 6, 8, 20–22

Prairie Tale Series / 11–13

South Dakota Biography Series / 16–17 Travel & Leisure / 10, 20–22

thoughts on the books. As we

move into the 2010–2011 school year, be sure to check out the

South Dakota State Historical Society Press

content. In addition to the main

tions designed to encourage

Phone: (605) 773-6009

blog (sdshspress.wordpress.com),

and/or draw pictures that are

authors, as well as podcasts,

videos, and other multimedia

website, the Press maintains a

a twitter account (@sdshspress), a Facebook page (search SDSHS

forum for a series of competi-

young readers to write stories inspired by the Prairie Tales.

900 Governors Drive, Pierre, SD 57501-2217 Fax: (605) 773-6041

E-mail: info@sdshspress.com Websites:

www.sdshspress.com

www.prairie-tale.com

Press), and a YouTube station

As a book publisher, with paper

tion of providing you with as

the South Dakota State Historical

Social Media:

Facebook: SDSHS Press

the future of the world’s remain-

Blog: sdshspress.wordpress.com

(SDSHSPress), all with the intenmuch information as we can

about our books and to help us

meet your needs, whatever your

interest in South Dakota’s history might be.

We also produce and send out

a regular e-newsletter, full of special offers, news, and opportuni-

ties to be a part of what the Press is doing. If you are interested in

receiving the e-newsletter, simply sign up for an account at www.

sdshspress.com, email info@sdshspress.com to request it or visit

our Facebook page and fill in the online form.

still a core part of our business,

Society Press is concerned about ing Endangered Forests and the

environmental impacts of paper

Twitter: @sdshspress

YouTube: SDSHSPress

production. We are committed to protecting the environment, to the responsible use of natural

resources, and to implementing policies that will support the

preservation of Endangered Forests globally and advance best practices within the book and

paper industries. A full descrip-

tion of the efforts that the South Dakota State Historical Society Press is making towards these

aims can be found on our website, www.sdshspress.com.

free shipping on orders over $30 (see order form for details)


A Note from the Director Having a conversation is all the buzz at the moment. Whether it is through a traditional

method, such as face-to-face, or using some aspect of social media, conversing with people has never been more important. The South Dakota State Historical Society Press has

embraced that concept ever since it started publishing books fourteen years ago. Each time we publish a new book, we are, in effect, having a conversation with the reader through the author’s words.

Our part in the conversation may be hidden, but it is vitally important to the success

of the book you are holding. We participate in that conversation by researching, editing,

producing, and then marketing each book. Without such contributions, the conversation would be far more one-sided; authors would speak to themselves and few others.

The way in which we hold this conversation with authors and readers is in a state of

flux at the moment. Printed books have been a source of information and discussion-

starters for hundreds of years, but there is a new kid on the block. Ebooks, digital versions of the traditional, printed books, have begun to raise their voices in the collective book conversation. Realizing that there is a valid place for ebooks, the South Dakota State

Historical Society Press is working to bring some of our titles into the discussion in digital format. Over the next year or so, you can expect to see more and more of our titles appearing on our website as ebooks.

I am excited that I am involved in the book-publishing industry at this dynamic time. It will be fascinating to see what happens as people continue adopting new technologies

with which to converse with and about books. Equally fascinating is our line of new titles for 2010–2011. As sometimes happens, one subject seems to attract multiple treatments

from different authors, and so we bring two different titles to the conversation about the famous Hunkpapa leader Sitting Bull. Joining them on our list are a collection of essays

about people of the Black Hills who, while important to the region, did not quite warrant having their faces carved on Mount Rushmore, and the first book-length study of the

Populism movement in South Dakota. Our children’s list continues to grow, as well. This year we have already published The Mystery of the Maize and will add the fifth Prairie Tale, full of stunning illustrations from Lakota artist Donald Montileaux, this fall.

I hope you will find time to enjoy one or more of these new books and, perhaps, to start your own conversations with authors and illustrators.

Nancy Tystad Koupal, Director, SDSHS Press


N E W   PA P E R B A C K O R I G I N A L

Sitting Bull

PRISONER OF WAR

dennis p ope 180 pages, 6 x 9 inches

27 b/w photographs & drawings, map, bibliography, index

ISBN 978-0-9822749-4-1 paper $16.95

November 2010 (FL)

Sitting Bull, Prisoner of War Dennis C. Pope Inside the famous chief ’s camp at Fort Randall, Dakota Territory After his surrender at Fort Buford in what is now North Dakota, the United States Army transported Sitting Bull and his followers down the Missouri River to Fort Randall, roughly seventy miles west of Yankton. There the famed Hunkpapa leader remained for twenty-two months, until September 1883. During that year and a half, Sitting Bull conducted tribal business, met with dignitaries and visitors, and interacted with those who imprisoned him. Dennis Pope has written a dramatic account of that time and those relationships, taking the reader inside Sitting Bull’s camp to see the day-to-day reality of captive life for this powerful man and his people. Pope paints an insider’s view of the events of these months, using extensive research, primary accounts from eye-witnesses, and the observations and writings of a reporter from the Saint Paul and Minneapolis Pioneer Press. The combination of sources presents an almost minute-by-minute description, intimately depicting the great chief’s character, beliefs, and thought processes. Sitting Bull, Prisoner of War fills a gap in the great chief’s story, allowing readers to explore a previously little-known episode of his life. Dennis C. Pope is a published author and film producer with a lifelong interest in Sitting Bull. He lives in Cardiff, Wales.

You might also enjoy: fort randall on the missouri,

1856–1892 (see page 21) the sitting bull

surrender census (see page 7)

2  South Dakota State Historical Society Press | Phone: (605) 773-6009 | www.sdshspress.com


From the book . . . “The cause of excitement at Buford that day was the fact that the Lakota at the head of the procession, slowly riding alongside the Indian trader Jean Louis Legaré, was the most notorious Indian in the world—Sitting Bull. This day he did not look the part. What the onlookers saw was a man dressed in a dirty threadbare calico shirt, plain black leggings, and an old dirty woolen blanket wrapped around his waist. His face was partially hidden by a calico handkerchief, wrapped turban-like, around his head. This bandana was pulled low over his eyes to protect them from the light, as he was suffering from an eye infection, a condition he was prone to. His attire was among the shabbiest in that dismal procession of his own Hunkpapa Lakota band, Itazipe Sica, the “‘Bad Bows.’”

Free shipping on orders over $30  3


N E W   PA P E R B A C K O R I G I N A L

Beyond Mount Rushmore Other Black Hills Faces

Edited and with an introduction by Mary A. Kopco Other Black Hills Faces

Beyond Mount Rushmore Edited and with an Introduction by Mary A. Kopco

352 pages, 6 x 9 inches

133 b/w photographs and illustrations, map, bibliography, index

ISBN 978-0-9822749-6-5 paper $19.95 2010 (FL)

Exploring the Black Hills through memoirs, biographies, and diaries Millions of visitors view the four famous faces of Mount Rushmore each year, but the Black Hills are home to more than just the presidents in Gutzon Borglum’s carved memorial. A wide variety of people have made their home in the Black Hills region over the past one hundred and thirty-five years. The essays in Beyond Mount Rushmore introduce the lives, hopes, dreams, and realities of ten of those other faces. Authors cover the gamut of Black Hills life, from the gold rush of the mid-1870s all the way through to the search for log-cabin isolation in the late-twentieth century. Famous musicians, Deadwood’s small Chinese population, an influential manager of the Homestake Mine, a Civilian Conservation Corps worker, a moral crusader, the first African American woman to settle in the Hills, and Alfred Hitchcock provide the cast of characters in this literary monument to Black Hills men and women. Editor Mary A. Kopco selected each essay from the pages of South Dakota History, the quarterly journal of the South Dakota State Historical Society, offering readers insight into the private and public lives of these fascinating Black Hills residents. Kopco’s introduction provides the context for each “face” in terms of the general history of the region, weaving the common and uncommon threads that bind the years, themes, and personalities together. Kopco is director of the Adams Museum & House in Deadwood, South Dakota, and is an author and historical consultant. Contributors: Donald W. Bolin Thomas R. Buecker Todd David Epp

You might also enjoy:

a marvelous hundred square miles (see page 10)

gold rush (see page 18)

gold, gals, guns, guts (see page 22)

4  South Dakota State Historical Society Press | Phone: (605) 773-6009 | www.sdshspress.com

Rose Estep Fosha Eileen French Todd Guenther George A. Larson James D. McLaird Rex C. Myers Denise Karst Pearce Susan L. Richards Maxwell Van Nuys Edith C. Wong


From the book . . . “While the granite busts of Washington, Jefferson, Roosevelt, and Lincoln may be South Dakota’s most identifiable faces, the region’s history is replete with the stories of the many people who carved out lives here. This anthology features a selection of memoirs, biographies, and essays written by and about Black Hills personalities. The ten essays and personal reflections brought together in this volume give evidence of the colorful culture and heritage of South Dakota and provide a complex image of the Black Hills region.”

Free shipping on orders over $30  5


NEW

Principle over Party The Farmers’ Alliance and Populism

in South Dakota, 1880–1900

Principle overParty THE FARMERS’ ALLIANCE AND POPULISM IN SOUTH DAKOTA, 1880 –1900

R. Alton Lee South Dakota’s role in nineteenth-century political movements The Populist movement of the 1890s was the most successful third-party movement in United States history. Although it never elected a president, this movement seated governors, congressmen, and United States senators and played a major political role in a number of states, including all the Great Plains states then in the Union. Populism has been thoroughly studied in many areas of the country, but South Dakota has, thus far, been neglected. R. Alton Lee’s Principle over Party corrects this oversight, shining light on the prominent South Dakotans who strode down the path to the progressive agrarian politics that dominated the state in the late 1800s and early 1900s.

R.Alton Lee 260 pages, 6 x 9 inches

10 b/w photographs, bibliography, index ISBN 978-0-9798940-9-1 cloth $32.95

May 2011 (FL)

Lee examines the causes that led South Dakota farmers to rise up against the establishment and take their fate into their own hands. He discusses prominent figures Henry Loucks and Alonzo Wardall as well as political and social movements, such as the Grange and the Farmers’ Alliance, and how these men and their organizations sowed the seeds for the Populist Party in South Dakota. Principle over Party showcases the successes and failures of one of the most lasting political movements in this nation’s history. R. Alton Lee is professor emeritus of history at the University of South Dakota. An acknowledged expert on American political history, Lee has written widely about midwestern and Great Plains history. You might also enjoy: peter norbeck (see page 22)

george mcgovern (see page 22)

6  South Dakota State Historical Society Press | Phone: (605) 773-6009 | www.sdshspress.com


NEW

The Sitting Bull Surrender Census Ephriam D. Dickson III

Never-before published census taken in 1881 Following Sitting Bull’s surrender to the United States Army in 1881, the Indian Division of the United States Census Office conducted a full and detailed census of the Sioux Indians at Standing Rock Indian Agency in central Dakota Territory. This census is the most complete and accurate account of Sitting Bull’s followers and, until Ephriam Dickson compiled this important work, the information contained within its pages has been hidden in archives beyond the reach of most researchers. Dickson’s book provides researchers and historians with an unrivalled resource with which to assess and analyze this group of American Indians. In Sitting Bull Surrender Census, Dickson has taken one of the total thirty-three different lists of Lakota families, with support from oral histories, and provided insight into the composition of communitiy or tiyospaye at Standing Rock, as Lakotas shifted from their traditional buffalo-hunting ways to their new sedentary life on the reservation.

figures, maps, bibliography, index ISBN 978-0-9822749-7-2 cloth $49.95

December 2010 (FL)

Ephriam D. Dickson III is curator of the Fort Douglas Museum in Salt Lake City, Utah. A native of northwestern Nebraska and a graduate of Chadron State College, he has written a number of articles on Lakota history. PRISONER OF WAR

You might also enjoy:

sitting bull, prisoner of war (see page 2)

Sitting Bull

300 pages, 8 ½ x 11 inches

Sitting Bull Surrender Census preserves the earliest detailed enumeration of every Lakota man, woman, and child at the agency at a critical juncture in Lakota history, just as the last of the non-treaty bands under Sitting Bull returned from Canada and joined their relatives at Standing Rock. Viewed within the context of Standing Rock’s rich documentary sources, Sitting Bull Surrender Census offers a remarkable snapshot of Lakota families and communities.

d en n i s p ope

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Dammed Indians Revisited The Continuing History

of the Pick-Sloan Plan and the Missouri River Sioux M I C H A E L L . L AW S O N

Michael L. Lawson New introduction by

George McGovern

The impact of flooding the Missouri River Valley “A thoughtful, heavily researched, and soberly presented scholarly accounting”—Midwest Book Review

DAMMED

INDIANS REVISITED The Continuing History of the Pick-Sloan Project and the Missouri River Sioux

434 pages, 6 x 9 inches

19 b/w photographs, maps, bibliography, index ISBN 978-0-9798940-1-5 paper $18.95 2010 (FL)

“What an incredible piece of work this is.” —stewmagnuson.blogspot More than twenty-five years after the publication of Dammed Indians, Michael Lawson revisits his classic work. The 1944 Pick-Sloan Plan created a wealth of economic opportunities for the states lying along the Missouri River. But the project also flooded more than two hundred thousand acres of bottomlands that helped to sustain the Sioux (Lakota, Dakota, Nakota Indians) and forced the relocation of whole communities. Dammed Indians Revisited examines how the work of the United States Army Corps of Engineers and the Bureau of Reclamation affected the communities along the river, demonstrating the unequal relationship between the tribes and the federal government. Lawson has unearthed new information, revising his original work to bring the story up to date. While the flooding occurred more than sixty years ago, the impact of the plan and its ramifications for continuing tribal-federal relations remain relevant in the twenty-first century. Michael L. Lawson is a partner with Morgan, Angel & Associates in Washington, DC. He has served as historian for the National Park Service, the Smithsonian Institution, and the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and has written extensively on American Indian history. You might also enjoy: the sioux in

south dakota history (see page 21)

8  South Dakota State Historical Society Press | Phone: (605) 773-6009 | www.sdshspress.com


Small-town Boy, Small-town Girl

Growing Up in South Dakota, 1920–1950 Eric B. Fowler & Sheila Delaney

Edited and with an introduction by Molly

P. Rozum

Childhood memories from differing perspectives

small-town boy, small-town girl

1920-1950

GROWING UP IN SOUTH DAKOTA

eric b. fowl er & sh e il a de l a n e y Edited and with an introduction by Molly P. Rozum

260 pages, 6 x 9 inches

21 b/w photographs, index

ISBN 978-0-9798940-7-7 paper $17.95 2009 (FL)

Gold Medal Winner, Midwest Best Regional Non-fiction—IPPY Awards, Independent Publisher Magazine, 2010 “These engaging portraits of run-of-the-mill daily life . . . are told so vividly as to practically transport the reader through time and space.”—Midwest Book Review “If you like nostalgia or history, this is for you.”—Omaha World Herald Milbank and Mitchell, dissimilar in size and separated by more than two hundred miles, have more in common than might appear at first glance. Elsewhere in the country, they would be considered small towns, but in South Dakota, they are urban population centers. In the first half of the twentieth century, when many more South Dakotans lived on farms and ranches than do today, towns such as Milbank and Mitchell formed hubs for commerce, social activities, and culture. Eric Fowler and Sheila Delaney lived distinct lives and looked at their communities from different viewpoints, but their childhood and young adult memories of South Dakota share common themes of life away from the farm. Fowler dealt with the hardships of a low-income, single-parent family in Milbank and struggled with the deprivation this life entailed. Delaney experienced the wealth and occasional grandeur of Mitchell’s social elite, struggling instead with the expectations of and limited opportunities for women. Yet, both found youthful joy in mid-century South Dakota urban life. These two contrasting memoirs bring forth commonalities in the authors’ early experiences of smalltown life, even while they followed differing paths to adulthood.

Award-winning author Molly P. Rozum is associate professor of history at Doane College in Crete, Nebraska. She provides the introduction for this book, drawing the two stories together. Rozum specializes in history of the American West and American Indian history. You might also enjoy

these other memoirs:

waiting for coyote’s call (see page 20)

hard knocks (see page 22)

cowboy life

(see pages 18 and 20)

9


A Marvelous Hundred Square Miles Black Hills Tourism, 1880–1941 Suzanne Barta Julin

Caves, camping, and carving in the Black Hills

Award of Merit—American Association for State and Local History, 2010 Finalist, Foreword Magazine Book of the Year Awards, 2010 “An engaging, in-depth history of the Black Hills”—Midwest Book Review “Suzanne Julin has written a first-rate monograph on a significant regional topic: tourism. Her book is at once eminently readable and well-researched.”—South Dakota History “The book’s visual content is terrific and makes for a splendid visual document as well as an engrossing read.”—LibraryThing.com “This is an excellent, readable, well-researched work.”—Montana, the Magazine of Western History 240 pages, 7 ¼ x 9 ¼ inches

73 b/w photographs and illustrations, maps, bibliography, index

ISBN 978-0-9798940-6-0 cloth $25.95 2009 (FL)

You might also enjoy

these other Black Hills books: beyond mount rushmore (see page 4)

gold rush (see page 18)

gold, gals, guns, guts (see page 22) hard knocks (see page 22) Other Black Hills Faces

Beyond Mount Rushmore Edited and with an Introduction by Mary A. Kopco

Despite their isolated location on the edge of the Great Plains, the Black Hills have become an important tourist destination over the course of the past one hundred years. Suzanne Barta Julin examines the early development of this phenomenon and the influences—political, local, and national—that helped create a prosperous tourist industry in the region between the 1880s and the start of World War II. Public policy and state and federal government actions promoted the Black Hills as the vanguard of the West—both the mountain West and the Wild West—and developed a national park, two national monuments, the largest state park in the country, and the iconic Mount Rushmore as methods to direct tourist traffic to the region. Julin argues that these promotional efforts affected more than just tourism; they helped form or change local trends and issues and established the identity of the region. A Marvelous Hundred Square Miles addresses the concerted efforts of governmental, quasi-governmental, and private groups to develop the tourist industry in the early twentieth century. While this book is specifically about the Black Hills, its larger themes pertain to the development of tourism as one of the most important industries in the modern United States. Suzanne Barta Julin is an award-winning author, born and raised in South Dakota. She received her Ph.D. from Washington State University in Pullman. She currently works as a public historian for local, state, and national organizations, specializing in twentieth-century South Dakota and western history.

10  South Dakota State Historical Society Press | Phone: (605) 773-6009 | www.sdshspress.com


PRAIRIE TALE SERIES

FOR YOUNG READERS – FIRST TO FOURTH GRADE www.prairie-tale.com

The Prairie-Dog Prince

Dance in a Buffalo Skull

The Discontented Gopher

Illustrated by

Illustrated by S. D. Nelson

Illustrated by

Eva Katharine Gibson

Carolyn Digby Conahan Third in the Prairie Tale Series 40 pages, 6 ½ x 8 ¼ inches

Color illustrations, bibliography, word list ISBN 978-0-9798940-3-9 cloth $14.95 2008 (ML)

A traditional-style fairy tale set near the Black Hills

Gold Medal Winner, Distinctive Illustration—Mom’s Choice Awards, 2009 Silver Medal Winner, Fantasy, Myths, and Legends, Juvenile Books—Mom’s Choice Awards, 2009 “This is a fairy tale, not a natural history, but young readers will find much to learn. Wishes, morals, and fantasy are the stars in this story.”—The Bloomsbury Review “Carolyn Digby Conahan’s splendid paintings are filled with motion and grace, and show effective use of light and shadow.”—LibraryThing.com In western South Dakota, a young girl named Annie finds a prairie dog stuck in a trap. She frees the little animal, and her kindness leads to adventure. Modern illustrations from award-winning artist Carolyn Digby Conahan bring this classic mix of early 1900s European fantasy, American writing, and traditional American Indian beliefs up to date.

Zitkala-Ša

Second in the Prairie Tale Series 40 pages, 6 ½ x 8 ¼ inches

Color illustrations, bibliography, word list ISBN 978-0-9777955-2-9 cloth $14.95 2007 (C)

Classic American Indian tale brought to life Aesop Accolade—American Folklore Society, 2008 Most Outstanding Children’s Book— Mom’s Choice Awards, 2008 Gold Medal Winner, Myths, Legends & Fantasies, Ages 5–8—Mom’s Choice Awards, 2008 “Nelson’s illustrations add to the tension between the creeping wildcat and the celebrating mice.”—School Library Journal “Stunning illustrations bring new life to the language.”—Aesop Awards Committee “Nelson evokes a perfect combination of traditional prairie landscapes, the bright, wild, foot-stomping mice, and the eerie beast of the night.”—True West

L. Frank Baum

Carolyn Digby Conahan First in the Prairie Tale Series 40 pages, 6 ½ x 8 ¼ inches

Color illustrations, bibliography, word list ISBN 0-9749195-9-4 cloth $14.95 2006 (BL)

An American fable from the author of The Wizard of Oz

Gold Medal Winner, Chapter Books, Ages 5–8—Mom’s Choice Awards, 2007 Bronze Medal Winner, Juvenile Fiction, Early Readers—Moonbeam Children’s Book Awards, 2007 “Conahan’s updated illustrations are warm and endearing.”—The Baum Bugle “A wonderful American fairy tale” —Rapid City Journal Zikky-the-Gopher finds more than he bargained for in this allegorical story set on the prairies of South Dakota.

Unobservant mice learn to pay more attention in this old American Indian tale. Contemporary Lakota artist S. D. Nelson fuses traditional Lakota Indian styles with modern interpretations.

www.prairie-tale.com  11


PRAIRIE TALE SERIES

FOR YOUNG READERS – FIRST TO FOURTH GRADE www.prairie-tale.com

The Raccoon and the Bee Tree Charles A. Eastman & Elaine Goodale Eastman Illustrated by Susan Turnbull Fourth in the Prairie Tale Series

A raccoon explores the night and finds an unexpected treasure Gold Medal Winner, Distinctive Illustration—Mom’s Choice Awards, 2009 Gold ADDY Winner, Illustration—South Dakota Advertising Federation, 2010 Silver Medal Winner, Children’s Picture Books—IPPY Awards, Independent Publisher Magazine, 2010 Silver Medal Winner, Fantasy, Myths, and Legends, Juvenile Books— Mom’s Choice Awards, 2009 “This is a delightful tale. Susan Turnbull has illustrated this edition with charming artwork.”—LibraryThing.com “The illustrations are truly wonderful.”—MIPA Book Award judge

40 pages, 6 ½ x 8 ¼ inches

Color illustrations, bibliography, word list ISBN 978-0-9798940-8-4 cloth $14.95 2009 (FL)

In southeastern South Dakota, wild animals begin to stir as day turns to dusk. A curious raccoon emerges from his bed to hunt for food. Tempted by sticky honey oozing from a bee’s nest, the little raccoon finds trouble he did not bargain for. The Raccoon and the Bee Tree combines the traditions of American Indian storytelling and European fables. Written down one hundred years ago by Dakota Indian physician Charles A. Eastman and his wife Elaine Goodale Eastman, The Raccoon and the Bee Tree contains a lesson for children that is still important and relevant in today’s modern society. Doctor Charles A. Eastman (1858–1939) was a Wahpeton Dakota, who worked on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. He also published nine books and articles on Sioux legends, customs, and beliefs. Born in Massachusetts, Elaine Goodale Eastman (1863–1953) moved to Pine Ridge in 1886 to teach on the reservation, where she met and married Charles Eastman. She encouraged her husband to write about his experiences, life, and heritage, and worked as editor on his publications.

12  www.prairie-tale.com

Susan Turnbull is an award-winning illustrator and artist from Rapid City, South Dakota. She has illustrated numerous books, and her art has been shown in galleries across the country from New York City to Santa Fe, New Mexico.


NEW PRAIRIE TALE SERIES

FOR YOUNG READERS – FIRST TO FOURTH GRADE www.prairie-tale.com

The Enchanted Buffalo L. Frank Baum Illustrated by Donald F. Montileaux Fifth in the Prairie Tale Series

A young buffalo takes on the treacherous leader of the herd “The illustrations are the crowning gems of The Enchanted Buffalo. Simply put, they're stunning” —LibraryThing.com Deep in the Great Plains of South Dakota, a tribe of mighty buffaloes finds themselves without a leader. A tricky bull named Barrag takes control of the group until the brave young Oknu challenges the new leader. But he does not know that Barrag has special powers. Barrag tricks Oknu with the help of magic, but a surprise is in store for the nasty Barrag. Good and evil, treachery and bravery, pride and wisdom all feature in L. Frank Baum’s fairy tale set during the heyday of the buffalo on the Great Plains. Baum wrote the story in 1905 and uses his fable to show the dangers of greed, dirty tricks, and broken promises.

40 pages, 6 ½ x 8 ¼ inches

Color illustrations, bibliography, word list

ISBN 978-0-9822749-3-4 cloth $14.95

Donald F. Montileaux is a multi-award-winning Oglala Lakota artist and illustrator from Rapid City. His book, Tatanka and the Lakota People: A Creation Story, won an Aesop Accolade and a Spur Award, as well as three other national awards. His ledgerbook-inspired artwork has been featured all over the country in both private and public collections.

September 2010 (FL)

www.prairie-tale.com  13


F O R YO U N G R E A D E R S – F I R S T T O F O U R T H G R A D E

The Mystery of the Tree Rings

The Mystery of the Round Rocks

Illustrated by Jason Folkerts

Illustrated by Jason Folkerts

Mark Meierhenry & David Volk 44 pages, 8 x 9 inches Color illustrations

ISBN 978-0-9798940-0-8 hardcover $13.95 2008 (ML)

Mark Meierhenry & David Volk 44 pages, 8 x 9 inches Color illustrations

ISBN 978-0-9777955-3-6 hardcover $13.95 2007 (BL)

An ancient tree in the Black Hills shares its secrets

Glaciers and rocks create mystery on the Great Plains

Silver Medal Winner, Midwest Best Regional Fiction— IPPY Awards, Independent Publisher Magazine, 2009

Bronze Medal Winner, Midwest Best Regional Fiction— IPPY Awards, Independent Publisher Magazine, 2008

“Simple, colorful illustrations and a final blank, lined page for the child to write in to start their own journal round out this charming story about learning to appreciate and remember the wonders all around us.”—Midwest Book Review

“Highly recommended”—Midwest Book Review

Max and Hannah’s discovery that their grandfather has kept a journal since he was young impresses them, but Grandpa has an even longer journal in mind when he whisks them off to the Black Hills for a mystery-solving trip. When they arrive, the children and Grandpa set off on a hike to find a ponderosa pine nearly eight hundred years old.

While visiting their grandparents’ farm in South Dakota, Max and Hannah discover hundreds of rocks piled up in the corner of a field. Puzzled, the twins ask Grandpa if he has the key to this mystery. How did all those round rocks get there?

Along the way, Max gets lost, hears a mysterious voice, and is soon discovering the secrets wrapped up in the old tree’s rings. When Hannah and Grandpa eventually find Max again, he has all the answers to what is inside that ancient journal.

The Mystery of the Round Rocks is a “nicely done lesson in natural history.”—Roundup Magazine

Watch out for saber-tooth tigers and short-faced bears, wooly mammoths, giant deer, and bison before Max and Hannah unlock the secret of the rocks.

Former South Dakota attorney general Mark Meierhenry currently practices law in Sioux Falls. Five-time state treasurer David Volk also served as cabinet secretary for Governor William Janklow. Jason Folkerts is a freelance editorial cartoonist.

14  South Dakota State Historical Society Press | Phone: (605) 773-6009 | www.sdshspress.com


NEW

F O R YO U N G R E A D E R S – F I R S T TO F O U R T H G R A D E

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us Ill

to visit.

s from the

the mystery of the maize

ysteries.

The Mystery of the

44 pages, 8 x 9 inches Color illustrations

ISBN 978-0-9822749-1-0 hardcover $13.95 2010 (FL)

Inquisitive young historians Max and Hannah unearth the mystery of corn “This book teaches children about the historical value of corn, as well as its evolution to becoming a staple in the American diet.”—Foreword Reviews Magazine Max and Hannah love maize; they eat corn on the cob in the summer and like to make popcorn, too. But, they have a lot to learn about maize and all its mysteries. The twins’ grandfather has a great story to tell them and more interesting places to visit. On their adventures, Hannah discovers a link to Heron and Muskrat, a pair of twins from the ancient maize-growing people who lived in South Dakota. What does she find, and what do the modern-day twins learn about the brother and sister from thousands of years ago? The Mystery of the Maize shows the development of maize as it links the past to the present. Max and Hannah find out that maize can be used in many ways, and they discover that things have changed a lot since people first planted the crop thousands of years ago. This is the third book from former South Dakota attorney general Mark Meierhenry and five-time state treasurer David Volk. Oglala Lakota artist Marty Two Bulls, Sr., has produced award-winning illustrations and artwork for twenty-five years. He holds a bachelors degree in fine arts from the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Free shipping on orders over $30  15


BEST SELLER

CLASSIC / BEST SELLER

Wild Bill Hickok and Calamity Jane

Laura Ingalls Wilder

James D. McLaird

Pamela Smith Hill

Deadwood Legends

Volume Two in the South Dakota Biography Series 184 pages, 4 ¾ x 8 inches

17 b/w photographs and illustrations, bibliography, index ISBN 978-0-9777955-9-8 paper $12.95 2008 (ML)

A Writer’s Life

Volume One in the South Dakota Biography Series 244 pages, 4 ¾ x 8 inches

13 b/w photographs and illustrations, bibliography, index ISBN 978-0-9777955-6-7 paper $12.95 2007 (C)

Wild West legends debunked

Delve inside Laura Ingalls Wilder’s life and work

“This is an interesting, professional, and well-written study.” —Great Plains Quarterly

Winner, Scholarly Nonfiction—WILLA Award, 2008 Winner, Biography—National Indie Excellence Book Awards, 2008

“A fascinating read for anyone who wants to learn about how the daring real-life deeds (and misdeeds) of Wild Bill Hickok and Calamity Jane were destined to grow beyond imagination through the telling.”—Midwest Book Review

“McLaird’s writing is concise and to the point, exploding myths about two Western characters.”—LibraryThing.com Although Wild Bill Hickok and Calamity Jane spent only a few weeks in Deadwood at the same time, their fame and fate have become intertwined and their relationship legendary. James D. McLaird examines the contemporary accounts that turned these two Wild West wanderers into dime-novel and motionpicture stars.

Fact and fiction have become so woven together that a definitive picture of Calamity Jane and Wild Bill is almost impossible. Their brief friendship and subsequent burial next to each other in Mount Moriah Cemetery simply added to their legendary status and made them stalwarts of Wild West pop culture and Deadwood mythology. James D. McLaird is professor emeritus of history at Dakota Wesleyan University. He is the author of books and articles focusing on the Black Hills and the American West.

S O U T H DAKOTA BIOGRAPHY S E R I E S

“A fascinating and remarkable book that deserves a place on the shelf of every Laura fan”—The Homesteader “Pamela Smith Hill has [created] a work of considerable scholarship and insight.”—The Little House Heritage Trust

“Hill skillfully examines the complex relationship between Wilder and her daughter.”—Kansas History “If you’ve ever wanted to peek behind the scenes of the “Little House” series, this is your book. . . . [It] is a page turner.”—Roundup Magazine

Pamela Smith Hill examines Wilder’s tumultuous, but ultimately successful, professional and personal relationship with her daughter, Rose Wilder Lane. Over the course of more than thirty years, mother and daughter engaged in a dynamic working relationship, shifting between trust, distrust, and respect. Hill provides a context, both familial and literary, for Wilder’s writing career. Pamela Smith Hill is an awardwinning author of historical novels for young adults. She grew up in Missouri and started her writing career in South Dakota

S O U T H DAKOTA BIOGRAPHY S E R I E S

16  South Dakota State Historical Society Press | Phone: (605) 773-6009 | www.sdshspress.com


BEST SELLER

Seth Bullock Black Hills Lawman David A. Wolff

Volume Three in the South Dakota Biography Series

Unheralded figure in the development of the Black Hills Finalist, Foreword Magazine Book of the Year Awards, 2010 A “fine biography”—Annals of Wyoming “Seth Bullock: Black Hills Lawman is highly recommended for persons interested in western lawmen, the Black Hills, the Deadwood television series, and, in fact, anyone looking for an informative book to read.”—South Dakota History “This is an excellent addition to any Western history collection, whether personal or library. It is a quick introduction to a variety of aspects of Bullock’s, and South Dakota’s, development.”—Amazon.com reviewer “Without hesitation, I would recommend this book be on the bookshelf of anyone interested not only in South Dakota’s history, but the history of the Wild West.”—Wild West History Association Journal Wolff’s study is “a fascinating and readable biography. Having only come across Seth Bullock in the Deadwood TV series I found that this book brought to life the real person behind the legend.”—LibraryThing.com 216 pages, 4 ¾ x 8 inches

14 b/w photographs, bibliography, index ISBN 978-0-9798940-5-3 paper $12.95 2009 (FL)

S O U T H DAKOTA BIOGRAPHY S E R I E S

Much of Seth Bullock’s modern renown comes from television, motion pictures, and his friendship with President Theodore Roosevelt. But Bullock was much more than the frontier law enforcer portrayed in fictional accounts. In Seth Bullock: Black Hills Lawman, David Wolff examines the life work of Bullock as he helped build Deadwood, found the town of Belle Fourche, and promote the Black Hills. Wolff points out that Bullock quickly became an integral part of the burgeoning community, working to create a lasting legacy in local and regional politics, various businesses, and at the forefront of Black Hills law enforcement and forest management. David A. Wolff is associate professor of history at Black Hills State University in Spearfish, South Dakota. He is an award-winning author focusing on Black Hills, South Dakota, mining, and western history. Seth Bullock: Black Hills Lawman is the third book in the South Dakota Biography Series, which highlights some of the state’s most famous residents. Future subjects in this series will include Crazy Horse, Spotted Tail, Gabriel Renville, and Casey Tibbs.

Free shipping on orders over $30  17


ebooks from the South Dakota State Historical Society Press 2010 sees the launch of three ebooks. Each book is available for download from our main website, www.sdshspress.com, in formats to suit most e-readers currently available. picturing the past South Dakota’s Historic Places

Jay D. Vogt, Stephen C. Rogers, Scott Myers

ISBN 978-0-9822749-8-9 ebook $14.95 Winner, Educational Project— National Conference of State Historic Preservation Officers Award for Excellence in Historic Preservation, 2007 Award of Merit—American Association for State and Local History, 2007 Award-Winner, Photography: Architecture & Design category— National Best Books Awards, 2007 “The superb black-and-white photos of art historian and professional photographer Myers are well displayed in this lovely volume on historic architecture.” —Reference & Research Book News “Great pictures and insightful contextual narrative”—Kansas History

cowboy life The Letters of George Philip

Edited and with an introduction by

Cathie Draine

Afterword by Richard W. Slatta ISBN 978-0-9822749-9-6 ebook $11.95 Award of Merit—American Association for State and Local History, 2008 Finalist, Autobiography/Biography/ Memoirs—Benjamin Franklin Awards, 2008 “Each [letter] is virtually a miniessay designed to extol the realities of cowboy life.”—True West “An entertaining and insightful look into the day-to-day life of a cowboy”—Reference & Research Book News

gold rush The Black Hills Story

John D. McDermott ISBN 978-0-9845041-0-7 ebook $9.95 “A neat, little volume on the discovery, exploration, and development of the Black Hills of South Dakota”—Nebraska History “Based on original research, each of the essays offers new insight into the Black Hills gold rush. The reexamination of some well-known topics and the presentation of new materials by the authors will certainly encourage further research.” —Journal of the West

“George Philip’s letters are a pleasure to read.” —South Dakota History

“Picturing the Past is a well-written, attractive, and informative book that conveys South Dakota’s rich heritage.”—Mary W. Edmonds, South Carolina Department of Archives and History

18  South Dakota State Historical Society Press | Phone: (605) 773-6009 | www.sdshspress.com


FOR YOUNG READERS – ALL AGES CLASSIC/BEST SELLER

FOR YOUNG READERS – FOURTH TO SEVENTH GRADE

Tatanka and the Lakota People

The Jumping-Off Place

Illustrated by Donald F. Montileaux

Afterword by Jean L. S. Patrick

A Creation Story

Marian Hurd McNeely

44 pages, 11 x 8 inches

320 pages, 5 x 7 inches

ISBN 978-0-9822749-0-3 paper

ISBN 978-0-9798940-4-6 paper

17 color paintings, English and Lakota text $9.95

2006 (C)

A story of beginnings, featuring beautiful Lakota art Aesop Accolade—American Folklore Society, 2007 Spur Award—Western Writers of America, 2007 Gold Medal—Moonbeam Children’s Book Awards, 2007 National Best Books Award—USABookNews.com, 2007 “This is a beautiful rendering of story and illustration that needs to be in every library interested in building the diversity of their collection.”—Kirkus Reviews “The striking and symbolic color paintings add a vivid dimension to the tale. A profound tale, presented with great respect for Lakota culture.”—Midwest Book Review “This is a good choice for libraries seeking folk material.” —School Library Journal “A beautifully illustrated and well-documented picture book” —2007 Aesop Award Committee Part of the Lakota creation legend and based on centuries of storytelling, Tatanka and the Lakota People tells how the buffalo came to live with the Lakotas so that they would have lifesustaining food, shelter, and clothing. Donald F. Montileaux is an award-winning Oglala Lakota artist, presenter, and consultant.

16 b/w illustrations, maps $15.95

2008 (1929) (ML)

Four children homestead in South Dakota Newbery Honor Book, 1930 Gold Medal Winner, Young Adult Books, Historical Fiction— Mom’s Choice Awards, 2009 “The Jumping-Off Place is filled with vocabulary, language, and unusual phrases that add color to an already delightful story.” —Bismarck Tribune “This is a wonderful book with believable characters, a good story, and graceful prose.”—LibraryThing.com Four young homesteaders strive to succeed on a quarter section in Tripp County, South Dakota, at the beginning of the 1900s. The youngsters work hard to “prove up” the land and buildings, while contending with drought, discomfort, and sabotaging squatters. As winter looms, the battle for their land heats up. With the help of new-found friends and their own derring-do, Becky, Dick, Phil, and Joan seek to hold the enemy at bay and withstand whatever the elements throw at them. Marian Hurd McNeely (1877–1931) wrote books, articles, and poems for young readers. Award-winning children’s author Jean L. S. Patrick provides a new afterword, placing the story in its historical context.

Free shipping on orders over $30  19


Cowboy Life

The South Dakota State Capitol

Edited and with an introduction

Marshall Damgaard

Waiting for Coyote’s Call

Classic/Best Seller

River Bluff

The Letters of George Philip

The First Century

by Cathie Draine

Volume Four in the Historical Preservation Series

An Eco-Memoir from the Missouri Jerry Wilson

292 pages, 6 x 9 inches

18 color photographs, map, bibliography, index ISBN 978-0-9777955-8-1 cloth $24.95 2008 (BL)

Finalist, Foreword Magazine Book of the Year Awards, 2009 Finalist, Midwest Independent Book Publishers Awards, 2009

Living with nature, South Dakota-style

Jerry Wilson “fashions an intimate tapestry of the Missouri River bluffs and woodlands that are underappreciated in the Plains.”—Great Plains Quarterly “With plenty of anecdotes and intriguing stories, Waiting for Coyote’s Call is solid and very recommended reading for environmentally-oriented readers.”—Midwest Book Review

“Waiting for Coyote’s Call is an engrossing memoir to explore on a blustery winter’s evening after you stoke the wood-burning stove and settle in your favorite chair.” —Roundup Magazine Inspired by the works of Henry David Thoreau, Aldo Leopold, and Annie Dillard, Jerry Wilson’s eco-memoir covers twentyfive years of trying to live life while leaving as small an environmental footprint as possible. Wilson encourages the reader to think about his or her place in nature as he recounts his own family’s experiences on prairie and woodland near the Missouri River in eastern South Dakota. From the author’s delight in homegrown tomatoes and high-flying Sandhill cranes to concerns about human interaction with the web of life, the stories of Wilson’s time on the Missouri River bluff spring off the pages of Waiting for Coyote’s Call.

Afterword by Richard W. Slatta Illustrated by Mick B. Harrison 384 pages, 6 x 9 inches

20 b/w illustrations, 2 b/w photographs, maps, appendix, bibliography, index ISBN 978-0-9777955-1-2 cloth

ISBN 978-0-9822749-9-6 ebook $25.95 (cloth)

$11.95 (ebook) 2007 (C)

Real cowboy life on South Dakota’s open range

Award of Merit—American Association for State and Local History, 2008 Finalist, Autobiography/Biography/ Memoirs—Benjamin Franklin Awards, 2008 “Each [letter] is virtually a mini-essay designed to extol the realities of cowboy life.”—True West “An entertaining and insightful look into the day-to-day life of a cowboy.” —Reference & Research Book News

“George Philip’s letters are a pleasure to read.”—James D. McLaird, South Dakota History

152 pages, 11 x 8 inches

75 color photographs and 60 b/w photographs, bibliography, index

ISBN 978-0-9798940-2-2 cloth $29.95 2008 (ML)

Celebrating the centennial of South Dakota’s capitol

“Damgaard has done a great service in producing this information-filled book that illustrates how the South Dakota capitol has changed over the decades.” —South Dakota History

“The South Dakota State Capitol combines factual information with a casual nononsense approach to the state’s history, illustrated by spectacular photographs that pull the reader into a vivid record of the Northern Plains.”—Great Plains Quarterly “The South Dakota State Capitol is a core addition to all South Dakota historical, community, and school library reference collections, and would serve as a model template for similar historical studies of other state capitols as well.”—Midwest Book Review Standing firmly in the middle of South Dakota, on the banks of the Missouri River, Pierre seems the logical choice for the capital of the state, but twenty years of infighting took place before work started on the permanent edifice that celebrates its one hundredth anniversary this year.

20  South Dakota State Historical Society Press | Phone: (605) 773-6009 | www.sdshspress.com


dakota flora

A Seasonal Sampler David J. Ode

fort randall on the missouri, 1856–1892 Jerome A. Greene

266 pages, 7 x 11 inches

274 pages, 6 x 9 inches

appendices, bibliography, index

appendices,

103 color photographs,

ISBN 0-9749195-4-3 paper $29.95 2006 (ML)

South Dakota’s wild plants and their stories

Winner, National Best Book Award— USABookNews.com, 2007 Bronze Medal Winner, Best Regional Non-fiction—IPPY Awards, Independent Publisher Magazine, 2007 Dakota Flora “is a gem of literature and camera art.”—Aberdeen American News

“David Ode’s writing is tight, accurate, frequently humorous, and nearly always contains an important historical flavor.”—Tony Dean, Tony Dean Outdoors

along the grapevine trail

Vineyards and Wineries in South Dakota, Wyoming, and Nebraska Starley Talbott 160 pages, 5 x 8 inches

20 color photographs, 3 maps, glossary,

bibliography, index

ISBN 978-0-9777955-7-4 paper $9.95 $14.95 2008 (BL)

A guide to the wine business on the northern plains

“Talbott catches the hard scrabble spirit of the Northern Great Plains in the men and women who are pioneers in the oncethought-impossible pursuit of planting vineyards in this region.”—Wyoming Tribune Eagle “This is an aesthetically pleasing book, with beautiful glossy photos that showcase the surprisingly numerous vineyards and farm wineries in the northern plains.”—LibraryThing.com

43 b/w photographs, 7 maps, bibliography, index

ISBN 0-9777955-0-0 paper $17.95 2005 (BL)

History of a frontier fort in its heyday

Award of Merit—American Association for State and Local History, 2006

“Fort Randall is a valuable addition for those interested in the Great Sioux War and regional history.”—The Journal of Military History

“Fort Randall is engaging and comprehensive. Anyone interested in frontier military-Indian relations will find Greene’s work valuable reading.”—Nebraska History

history of south dakota

Fourth Edition, Revised Herbert S. Schell Revised, with a new preface and new chapters, by John E. Miller 444 pages, 6 x 9 inches

32 b/w photographs, 9 maps and charts, supplementary reading lists, bibliography, index

ISBN 0-9715171-3-4 paper $24.95 2004 (ML)

The classic history of the state

“Schell’s History of South Dakota is the finest history of the state that has been written.”—James D. McLaird, professor emeritus, Dakota Wesleyan University

Herbert Schell and John Miller provide a picture of South Dakota’s political, economic, social, and environmental history, identifying the local, regional, national, and global forces that shaped the fortieth state.

the sioux in south dakota history A Twentieth-Century Reader Edited by Richmond L. Clow

320 pages, 6 x 9 inches

26 b/w photographs, map, index ISBN 978-0-9777955-4-3 paper $18.95 2007 (ML)

American Indian experiences in South Dakota since 1900

Finalist, Anthologies—National Indie Excellence Book Awards, 2008 Bronze Medal, Anthologies—IPPY Awards, 2008 “This collection, as a whole, attempts to understand a contemporary people in a changing world.”—Kansas History

Taken from the pages of South Dakota History, these essays explore modern American Indian life.

forgotten lives

African Americans in South Dakota Betti VanEpps-Taylor 288 pages, 6 x 9 inches

18 b/w photographs, map, bibliography, index

ISBN 978-0-9777955-5-0 paper $17.95 2008 (BL)

Two hundred years of African American history in South Dakota

“Extensively researched, Forgotten Lives is a welcome contribution to South Dakota history and is especially recommended for public and university libraries.”—Midwest Book Review “As a first-generation study aimed at filling gaps in existing scholarship, [Forgotten Lives’] success is indisputable.”—Montana, the Magazine of Western History

Free shipping on orders over $30  21


ethnic oasis

The Chinese in the Black Hills Liping Zhu and Rose Estep Fosha ISBN 0-9715171-7-7 paper $15.95 2004 (BL) An untold chapter in the Chinese American experience

gold, gals, guns, guts

A History of Deadwood, Lead, and Spearfish, 1874–1976 Edited and with a new introduction by Bob Lee ISBN 0-9715171-8-5 paper $24.95 2004 (BL)

sunshine always

The Courtship Letters of Alice Bower and Joseph Gossage of Dakota Territory Edited and with an introduction by Paula M. Nelson ISBN 978-0-9749195-6-0 cloth $24.95 2006 (BL) Love letters of the founders of the Rapid City Journal newspaper

peter norbeck

Prairie Statesman Gilbert Courtland Fite ISBN 0-9749195-0-0 paper $17.95 2005 (1948) (BL)

The dramatic and dangerous early years of the northern Black Hills

The life of an early champion of South Dakota

hard knocks

george m c govern

Memoir of the last man to serve Wild Bill Hickok a drink

An examination of an influential politician and humanitarian

a south dakota guide

looking for history on highway 14

A Life Story of the Vanishing West Harry (“Sam”) Young ISBN 0-9749195-1-9 paper $17.95 2005 (BL)

New introduction by M. Lisle Reese From the WPA American Guide Series ISBN 0-9749195-3-5 paper $24.95 2005 (1938) (BL) A vintage tour guide for South Dakota

A Political Life, A Political Legacy Edited by Robert P. Watson ISBN 0-9715171-6-9 paper $19.95 2004 (BL)

John E. Miller ISBN 0-9622621-6-1 paper $17.95 2001 (1993) (BL)

A slice of small-town life in South Dakota

22  South Dakota State Historical Society Press | Phone: (605) 773-6009 | www.sdshspress.com


4 0t h A n n iver s ary

South Dakota History

The Journal of the South Dakota State Historical Society

Celebrating forty years of publication in 2010, South Dakota History continues its tradition of giving readers high-quality, highly readable scholarship. In more than six hundred articles published over the past four decades, South Dakota History has contributed immeasurably to our understanding of the region’s past. Join the South Dakota State Historical Society and receive this awardwinning journal. Published quarterly, South Dakota History explores wideranging topics in the history of the Northern Great Plains. A subscription to South Dakota History is a primary benefit of membership in the South Dakota State Historical Society. Through its program areas, the society promotes South Dakota’s colorful culture and heritage. For membership information, visit history.sd.gov or call (605) 773-6000. Online content, including “Dakota Images,” book reviews, and some currently-out-of-print issues, are available at www.sdshspress.com. Beginning in September 2010, South Dakota History will be available for scholars and researchers through EBSCO.

Free shipping on orders over $30  23


distribution

returns

Press books are distributed by:

of invoice for full credit or replacement. Bookseller returns will be accepted up to 240

South Dakota State Historical Society

Aldington Books Ashford, Kent, United Kingdom www.aldingtonbooks.co.uk 011 44 1233 720123 Baker & Taylor Books www.btol.com (800) 775-1800 Brodart www.books.brodart.com (800) 474-9816 BWI www.bwibooks.com (800) 888-4478 Dakota News Inc. Sioux Falls, SD (605) 336-3000 Dakota West Books Rapid City, SD (605) 718-1320 Emery-Pratt www.emery-pratt.com (800) 248-3887 Follett Library Resources www.flr.follett.com (888) 511-5114 Ingram Book Company www.ingrambookgroup.com (800) 937-8000 Partners Book Distributors www.partnerspublishersgroup.com (517) 694-3205 Taylor Distributing Lead, SD (605) 717-1745 YBP Library Services www.ybp.com (800) 258-3774

Books received by customers in damaged condition should be returned within 30 days days from invoice date, depending on list position. Front list: returns within 120 days, Classics and Mid list: returns within 180 days, Back list: returns within 240 days. See

listing codes below each book's publication date. Invoice number and date of purchase should be enclosed with the books. Full credit will be given for books that are still in

print, clean, unmarked, and in saleable condition as determined by the South Dakota

State Historical Society Press. Credit will not be given for books returned in unsaleable condition.Returns should be shipped to:

SDSHS Press, 900 Governors Drive, Pierre, SD 57501

review copies and media guides

New releases are accompanied by a full media guide.

To request such materials and for review copies and other marketing inquiries, contact:

Marketing Director

SDSHS Press, 900 Governors Drive, Pierre, SD 57501 (605) 773-8161

info@sdshspress.com

exam and desk copies

Classroom instructors who are considering SDSHS Press books for course

adoption may request examination copies. Requests must be on letterhead and

include appropriate course, academic, and bookstore information. Examination

requests for paperback books require prepayment of $3.00, and hardbound books

require prepayment of $7.00. Books become the property of the requester regardless of course adoption or otherwise. For full details or to order exam and desk copies, contact:

SDSHS Press, 900 Governors Dr., Pierre, SD 57501 (605) 773-8161

info@sdshspress.com

subsidiary rights

For information on reprint, foreign, audio, and book club rights, contact the Subsidiary Rights department at (605) 773-8161 or info@sdshspress.com

sdshs press offers the following discounts on direct sales:

To retailers (on all orders of more than 2 books)—Front list (FL) and

Classics (C), 40%; Mid-list (ML), 42%; Back list (BL), 44%. See listing codes (FL), (C), (ML), (BL) below each book’s information for applicable discounts.

To schools—1 to 10 books, 15%; 11 to 25 books, 20%; 26 books or more, 30%

To libraries—20% (Libraries that establish standing orders can earn a 25% discount. Contact our marketing department for further details.)

To South Dakota State Historical Society members—10%

24  South Dakota State Historical Society Press | Phone: (605) 773-6009 | www.sdshspress.com


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