The University of Utah Press Spring 2016 Catalog

Page 1

The University of Utah Press

SPRING/SUMMER 2016


American Indian Studies

14, 15

P. 3

Archaeology/Anthropology 1, 12, 14, 15 Biography

2, 4, 5

Creative Nonfiction

P. 4

3

Environment 10 Linguistics 13 Middle East Studies Mormon Studies

9 5-8

Paleontology 1 Philosophy 16 Poetry 11 Sports History

4

Western History

2, 3

Wildlife Biology

12

Women’s Studies

7

P. 7

Zoology 12 Distribution Partner

17

Featured Backlist

18-21

Essential Backlist

22-24

P. 11

P. 12

FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK, TWITTER, AND INSTAGRAM: @UOFUPRESS

P. 14

On the Cover: Rabbit and skull composite from Zooarchaeology, p12.

The University of Utah Press is a member of the Association of American University Presses.

www.UofUpress.com

Our Mission The University of Utah Press is an agency of the J. Willard Marriott Library of The University of Utah. In accordance with the mission of the University, the Press publishes and disseminates scholarly books in selected fields and other printed and recorded materials of significance to Utah, the region, the country, and the world.


new books

Paleontology/Archaeology

Extinct Mammals and the Archaeology of the Ice Age Great Basin Donald K. Grayson

A

s the Ice Age came to an end, North America lost a stunning variety of animals. Mammoths, mastodons,

ground-dwelling sloths the size of elephants, beavers the size of bears, pronghorn antelope the size of poodles, llamas, and carnivores to chase them—sabertooth cats, dire wolves, American lions and cheetahs; these and many more were gone by 10,000 years ago. Giant Sloths and Sabertooth Cats surveys all these animals, with a particular focus on the Great Basin. It also explores the major attempts to explain the extinctions. Because some believe that they were due to the activities of human hunters, the author also reviews the archaeological evidence

A fascinating study of the extinct Ice Age animals found in North America’s Great Basin

left by the earliest known human occupants of the Great Basin, showing that people were here at the same time and in the same places as many of the extinct animals. Were these animals abundant in the Great Basin? A detailed analysis of the distinctive assemblages of plants

Also of Interest

that now live in this region leads to a surprising, and perhaps controversial, conclusion about those abundances.

DONALD K. GRAYSON is a professor in the Department of Anthropology and the Quaternary Research Center at the University of Washington. He is a recipient of the Nevada Medal for scientific achievement and a member of the National Academy of Sciences. His publications include The Desert’s Past: A Natural Prehisotry of the Great Basin.

Dinosaurs of Utah

“A remarkable and personal account. Grayson brings to life this

Second Edition

enthralling menagerie of strange beasts while highlighting the

Frank DeCourten eBook 978-1-60781-265-4 Paper 978-1-60781-264-7 $34.95

Tracks in Deep Time

fascinating history of how we have learned about them. Hugely informative and entertaining, a pleasure to read and think about.”

The St. George Dinosaur Discovery Site at Johnson Farm Jerald D. Harris and Andrew R. C. Milner eBook 978-1-60781-438-2 Paper 978-1-60781-437-5 $10.95

—David E. Rhode, research professor of archaeology, Desert Research Institute, Reno, Nevada

“This is an excellent and easily read account of the Ice Age fauna of the Great Basin. It is one of the best at relating the large animals to the vegetation and physical environment of that time and the changes that followed the climate change at the end of the Ice Age. Its discussion of the extinction event, its timing and possible causes, should be read by all scientists working in that area.” — Ernest Lundelius Jr., professor emeritus of vertebrate paleontology, University of Texas at Austin

April 2016  320 pp., 7 x 10, 74 Illustrations, 55 maps eBook 978-1-60781-470-2  Paper 978-1-60781-469-6 $24.95

ORDERS: 800-621-2736 WWW.UOFUPRESS.COM

Giant Sloths and Sabertooth Cats

1


new books

THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS SPRING/SUMMER 2016

2

Western History/Biography

Cass Hite

The Life of an Old Prospector James H. Knipmeyer

I

n the late 1800s and early 1900s, Cass Hite was a wellknown prospector in the Glen Canyon area of southern

Utah. He lived as a recluse yet knew most of the river runners, trekkers, cowboys, and Native Americans that passed through the region. He often wrote to newspapers and was in turn sought out by reporters for his vibrant comments. Hite followed the trail of gold and silver to destinations throughout the West—a time recounted in a memoir he penned in rhyming verse. After his death, his name remained prominent in the region; the nearby Hite Marina has kept his name in the public eye for thousands of boaters. Despite this notoriety, no one has written a full-length, scholarly account of Hite’s life. This biography fills that void, detailing Hite’s story from his birth in central Illinois in 1845 to his death in Glen Canyon in 1914. It corrects some of the accepted stories about Hite and puts others in their

Separating fact from fiction in the life of a colorful figure in canyon country history proper perspective, while revealing new information. Scores Also of Interest

of photographs and excerpts from Hite’s own writing further illuminate this colorful prospector’s life.

Missouri native JAMES KNIPMEYER has been hiking and backpacking in southern Utah and northern Arizona for over fifty years and has published numerous articles about the region’s history. His books include Butch Cassidy: Historic Inscriptions of the Colorado Plateau; In Search of a Lost Race: The Illustrated American Exploring Expedition of 1892; and Joe Duckett: The Hermit of Montezuma Canyon.

Dave Rust

“Mr. Knipmeyer’s biography of Cass Hite is a well-researched and

A Life in the Canyons Fred Swanson Paper 978-0-87480-944-2 $15.95

clearly written monograph that will add to the story of one of the

The Glen Canyon Country

gold mining functioned there.”

A Personal Memoir Don D. Fowler Paper 978-1-60781-134-3 $34.95 Cloth 978-1-60781-127-5 $75.00

better known characters in Colorado River history. This book will help scholars and fans of the Colorado River understand better how —James M. Aton, author of John Wesley Powell: His Life and Legacy

“Knipmeyer consults newspapers, autobiographical accounts, and a range of manuscript sources to unearth the legendary life of ol’ Cass Hite. His engaging, factual biography will acquaint historians and interested readers with a colorful western figure.” —Jedediah Rogers, author of Roads in the Wilderness and c­ o–managing editor of the Utah Historical Quarterly

March 2016  366 pp., 6 x 9, 161 Illustrations eBook 978-1-60781-472-6  Cloth 978-1-60781-471-9 $36.95


new books

Western History/Creative Nonfiction

A Story of Exploration, Murder, and Mystery in the American West Scott Thybony

I

n 1935, three people went missing on separate occasions in the rugged canyon country of southeastern Utah.

A thirteen-year-old girl, Lucy Garrett, was tricked into heading west with the man who had murdered her father under the pretense of reuniting with him. At the same time, a search was underway for Dan Thrapp, a young scientist on leave from the American Museum of Natural History. Others were scouring the same region for an artist, Everett Ruess, who had disappeared into “the perfect labyrinth.” Intrigued by this unusual string of coincidental disappearances, Scott Thybony set out to learn what happened. He traced the journey of Lucy Garrett from the murder of her father to her dramatic courtroom testimony. He followed the route of Dan Thrapp as he crossed an

The gripping true story of three young people who went missing at the same time in the tangle of Utah canyons and slickrock expanses expanse of wildly rugged country with a pair of outlaws. Thrapp’s story of survival in an unforgiving land is a poignant counterpoint to the fate of the artist Everett

Also of Interest

Ruess, which the New York Times has called “one of the most enduring mysteries of the modern West.” Thybony draws on extensive research and a lifetime of exploration to create a riveting story of these three lives.

SCOTT THYBONY’S explorations of the American West have resulted in award-winning articles in magazines such as National Geographic, Smithsonian, and Outside. His books include Burntwater, chosen as a PEN Center West finalist for creative nonfiction, and the bestseller Canyon Country, from the National Geographic Society.

Ghosts of Glen Canyon

History beneath Lake Powell Revised Edition

C. Gregory Crampton

Foreword by Edward Abbey

“For a long time, many of us have known a simple truth: No

Paper 978-0-87480-946-6 $29.95

one writes better about the American West than Scott Thybony.

Wrecks of Human Ambition

a compelling book from the first sentence to the last as he

A History of Utah’s Canyon Country to 1936 Paul T. Nelson eBook 978-1-60781-334-7 Paper 978-1-60781-333-0 $19.95

He proves that fact again with The Disappearances. It is interweaves startling stories with poetic descriptions of time and place. With The Disappearances, Thybony shows why he has to be ranked alongside Ed Abbey and Chuck Bowden as a brilliant interpreter of the West.” —W. K. Stratton, author of Chasing the Rodeo and Ranchero Ford/ Dying in Red Dirt Country

April 2016  288 pp., 6 x 9, 13 Illustrations, 1 map eBook 978-1-60781-484-9  Paper 978-1-60781-483-2 $24.95

ORDERS: 800-621-2736 WWW.UOFUPRESS.COM

The Disappearances

3


new books

Biography / Sports History

THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS SPRING/SUMMER 2016

4

Alma Richards, Olympian Larry R. Gerlach

A

lma Richards, as an unsung high school student, set an   Olympic record for the high jump in the 1912 Stockholm

Olympics. He was the only native Utahn and member of the LDS Church to win an Olympic gold medal in the twentieth century. After a stellar collegiate track career that saw him lead Cornell to three national championships, Richards for two decades reigned as America’s most accomplished track and field athlete, winning national titles in five different events. Despite his prominence in the history of American sports, this is the first treatment of his athletic career and personal life. More than a century has passed since Alma Richards won an Olympic gold medal, yet this story about man and sport—the drive to excel, victory as validation of hard work, and the quest for public recognition and self-identity still resonates today.

The story of America’s most accomplished track and field athlete in the early twentieth century and the first Utahn and Mormon to win an Olympic gold medal

LARRY GERLACH is professor emeritus of history at the University of Utah. His numerous books and articles include Blazing Crosses in Zion: The Ku Klux Klan in Utah and The Men in Blue: Conversations With Umpires.

Also of Interest

“Gerlach’s well-sourced and well-reasoned arguments and commentary add nuance and critical analysis to the story, allowing glimpses into both the athlete and his world.” —David J. Lunt, assistant professor of history, Southern Utah University

“Gerlach seeks to separate fact from fiction and myth from reality, to discover a gifted athlete whose story we thought we knew but didn’t. Richards’s life—which is full of triumphs and tragedies, successes and failures—provides any interested reader with an

Dance with the Bear

important lens to view a number of topics.”

The Joe Rosenblatt Story Norman Rosenblatt eBook 978-1-60781-237-1 Cloth 978-1-60781-236-4 $44.95

—John Sillito, professor emeritus of libraries, Weber State University, Ogden, Utah

Juanita Brooks

The Life Story of a Courageous Historian of the Mountain Meadows Massacre Levi S. Peterson Paper 978-1-60781-151-0 $19.95

June 2016  288 pp., 6 x 9, 28 Illustrations eBook 978-1-60781-492-4  Cloth 978-1-60781-491-7 $34.95


new books

Mormon Studies / Biography

Gregory A. Prince

L

eonard Arrington is considered by many the foremost   twentieth-century historian of Mormonism. But

Arrington’s career was not without controversy. Gregory Prince takes an in-depth look at this respected historian and, in telling his story, gives readers insight into the workings of the LDS Church in the late twentieth century. In 1972, Arrington was asked to serve as the official church historian, becoming the only professional historian to hold that title. The shift of historiography from faith promotion to scholarly research and professional analysis was unacceptable to some powerful senior apostles. In 1980 the History Division was disassembled and moved to Brigham Young University, where Arrington’s broad influence on Mormon history remained strong.

The most comprehensive biography of Leonard Arrington to date—a story of scholarship and controversy This biography is the first to draw upon the remarkable Arrington diaries (over 20,000 pages) and it is supplemented by Prince’s interviews with more than 100 people who knew Arrington. The book provides background to continuing LDS struggles with member scholars, while illuminating the life of one prominent intellectual. Also of Interest

GREGORY A. PRINCE earned doctorate degrees in dentistry (DDS) and pathology (PhD) at UCLA and then pursued a four-decade career in pediatric infectious disease research. His interest in history led him to write several dozen articles and book chapters and three books, including Power from on High: The Development of Mormon Priesthood and the award-winning David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism, coauthored with Wm. Robert Wright (University of Utah Press, 2005).

“This biography breaks your heart a little, stiffens your spine a lot, and makes you fall in love with a man who may be his generation’s best human being.”

David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism

—Lavina Fielding Anderson, editor, Salt Lake City

Gregory A. Prince and Wm. Robert Wright eBook 978-1-60781-396-5 Cloth 978-0-87480-822-3 $29.95

“This is a well-written, exceptionally documented biography of

A Frontier Life

Arrington’s personal and professional life, almost unmatched in LDS

Jacob Hamblin, Explorer and Indian Missionary Todd M. Compton eBook 978-1-60781-235-7 Cloth 978-1-60781-234-0 $44.95

­arguably the most important figure in twentieth century Mormon intellectual history. It provides a captivating, highly readable history of biography. It made me wish I could go back and talk with Leonard again, and deservedly will long be the definitive work on the subject.” —Lester Bush, coeditor of Neither White Nor Black: Mormon Scholars Confront the Race Issue in a Universal Church

May 2016  432 pp., 7 x 10, 27 Illustrations eBook 978-1-60781-480-1  Cloth 978-1-60781-479-5 $39.95

ORDERS: 800-621-2736 WWW.UOFUPRESS.COM

Leonard Arrington and the Writing of Mormon History

5


Mormon Studies

new books

THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS SPRING/SUMMER 2016

6

Mormonism and the Making of a British Zion Matthew Lyman Rasmussen

M

ormonism in Britain began in the late 1830s with the   arrival of American missionaries from the Church

of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Not long afterward, thousands of British converts emigrated to Utah and became a kind of lifeblood for the early Mormon Church. England’s North West, where Mormonism had its strongest presence, has become a place of profound significance to the church, yet its early importance to Mormonism has never been fully explored. Matthew Rasmussen’s detailed account examines how Mormonism has changed and endured in Britain. After many British believers left for America, church membership in England fell so sharply that the movement in Britain seemed to be on the brink of collapse. Yet British Mormonism gradually rebuilt and continues today. How did this religious minority flourish when so many nineteenth-

The first in-depth history of the LDS Church in Britain century revivalist movements did not? Rasmussen explains Mormonism’s inception, perpetuation, and maturation in Britain in this compelling study of a “new religious movement” with staying power. Also of Interest

MATTHEW LYMAN RASMUSSEN holds a BA in English from the University of Utah and a PhD in history from Lancaster University in England and is a past recipient of the Mormon History Association’s best dissertation award. He lives in Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley with his wife and four children.

“The finest comprehensive study of the LDS Church in an international setting that I have ever read. Beautifully written, very well organized, and superbly well researched, Rasmussen’s study takes the reader on a journey through three distinct phases of

Joseph’s Temples

The Dynamic Relationship between Freemasonry and Mormonism Michael W. Homer eBook 978-1-60781-346-0 Cloth 978-1-60781-344-6 $34.95

Saints Observed

Mormonism in the United Kingdom.” —Richard E. Bennett, author of Mormons at the Missouri: WInter Quarters, 1846–1852

“An outstanding LDS history. I don’t know of any other books like

Studies of Mormon Village Life, 1850-2005 Howard M. Bahr eBook 978-1-60781-321-7 Cloth 978-1-60781-320-0 $37.95

this one. Matthew Rasmussen is a gifted writer.” —Ronald Watt, author of The Mormon Passage of George D. Watt: First British Convert, Scribe for Zion.

May 2016  336 pp., 6 x 9, 24 Illustrations, 5 maps eBook 978-1-60781-488-7  Cloth 978-1-60781-487-0 $39.95


new books

Mormon Studies/Women’s Studies

Historical and Contemporary Perspectives

Edited by Kate Holbrook and Matthew Bowman

H

ow do women who are members of a church with a predominately patriarchal power structure experience

personal agency in formal religious settings, in intimate relationships, publicly, and individually? From Jane Manning James, an African American woman who found empowerment and strength in Mormon ritual despite suffering exclusion based on her race, to contemporary church members who are more likely to prioritize personal revelation than hierarchy, Mormon women have answered this question in numerous ways. This engaging and seminal volume employs vivid primary documents, candid surveys, and illuminating oral histories to explore the perspectives of Latter-day Saint women. Contributors include lay members and prominent scholars in multiple disciplines, including both LDS and non-LDS viewpoints.

A combination of thematic, cultural, and historical approaches to the study of Mormon women KATE HOLBROOK is a specialist in women’s history at the LDS Church History Department. She is coeditor of Global Values 101: A Short Course and The First Fifty Years of Relief Society: Key Documents in Latter-day Saint Women’s History. Also of Interest

MATTHEW BOWMAN is associate professor of history at Henderson State University. He is the author of The Mormon People: The Making of an American Faith and The Urban Pulpit: New York City and the Fate of Liberal Evangelicalism.

“Without question, this is the strongest collection of essays and articles on the historical place of Mormon women in many years, if not ever.”

Helen Andelin and the Fascinating Womanhood Movement

—Andrea G. Radke-Moss, author of Bright Epoch: Women and Coeducation in the American West

Julie Debra Neuffer eBook 978-1-60781-328-6 Paper 978-1-60781-327-9 $19.95

“This work provides a comprehensive contribution to a range

A Faded Legacy

European, African, and American Indian Mormons give important

of historical and contemporary realities of Mormon women. Issues of race, interracial marriage and the experiences of Asian,

Amy Brown Lyman and Mormon Women’s Activism, 1872–1959 Dave Hall eBook 978-1-60781-454-2 Cloth 978-1-60781-453-5 $29.95

contributions on these themes. This book will take its place as an essential.” —Rosemary Radford Ruether, author of Goddesses and the Divine Feminine: A Western Religious History

May 2016   384 pp., 6 x 9, 11 Illustrations eBook 978-1-60781-478-8  Paper 978-1-60781-477-1 $34.95

ORDERS: 800-621-2736 WWW.UOFUPRESS.COM

Women and Mormonism

7


new books

Mormon Studies

THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS SPRING/SUMMER 2016

8

Directions for Mormon Studies in the Twenty-First Century Edited by Patrick Q. Mason

A

new era in Mormon studies is emerging from   an academy more attuned to the significance of

religion, the increased public prominence of Mormons and Mormonism, and an increasing number of scholars applying ever-more sophisticated methods to the study of Mormonism. Directions for Mormon Studies in the TwentyFirst Century captures this fruitful time by bringing together some of the most influential voices across the generations of Mormon studies. Neither a survey of the field nor a mere recapitulation of dominant themes, this volume charts areas for exploration and modes of inquiry that reflect the maturation of the field and help set the agenda for the next generation of Mormon studies scholarship.

Brings together influential voices to chart recent and new approaches in the field of Mormon Studies PATRICK Q. MASON is an associate professor of religion, chair of the Religion Department, and Howard W. Hunter Chair of Mormon Studies at Claremont Graduate University. He is author of The Mormon Menace: Violence and Anti-Mormonism in the Postbellum South and coeditor of War and Peace in Our Time: Mormon Perspectives.

Also of Interest

“This is an extraordinarily well-crafted collection of essays. The volume offers both a rearview mirror for where the field has been and a roadmap for where it is and can g0, providing one new direction after another.” —Edward J. Blum, coauthor of The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America

“The essays are well written, thoughtful, and represent the best

A Kingdom Transformed

Early Mormonism and the Modern LDS Church, second edition Gordon Shepherd and Gary Shepherd eBook 978-1-60781-445-0 Paper 978-1-60781-444-3 $35.00s

Mapmakers of the New Zion

A Cartographic History of Mormonism Richard Francaviglia eBook 978-1-60781-409-2 Cloth 978-1-60781-408-5 $34.95

and most forward thinking work in Mormon studies. The authors offer up specific Mormon case studies, but from interpretive positions that make the material interesting and relevant to scholars in other fields.” —Susanna Morrill, author of White Roses on the Floor of Heaven: Mormon Women’s Popular Theology, 1880–1920

May 2016  288 pp., 6 x 9, 20 Illustrations eBook 978-1-60781-476-4  Paper 978-1-60781-475-7 $29.00s


new books

Middle East Studies

Between Turkish Ethnicity and Islamic Identity Umut Uzer

T

urkish nationalism erupted onto the world stage in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as first

Greeks, then Armenians and other minority groups within the Ottoman Empire began to assert national identity and seek independence. Umut Uzer examines the ideological evolution and transformation of Turkish nationalism from its early precursors to its contemporary protagonists. Through a textual analysis of nationalist writings, this volume considers how political developments influenced Turkish nationalism. It tackles the question of how an ideology that began as a revolutionary, progressive, forward-looking ideal eventually transformed into one that is conservative, patriarchal, and nostalgic about the Ottoman and Islamic past. Between Islamic and Turkish Identity is the first book in any language to comprehensively analyze

The ideological odyssey of Turkish nationalism and its ties to the political history of modern Turkey Turkish nationalism with such scope and engagement with primary sources, dissecting the phenomenon in all its manifestations. Also of Interest UMUT UZER is an associate professor in the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences at Istanbul Technical University. He is the author of Identity and Turkish Foreign Policy: The Kemalist Influence in Cyprus and the Caucasus.

“Surveys some of the major ideas of Turkish nationalism as it traces the development and transformation of this idea in its various forms. Nothing of the sort exists in English that offers similar coverage.”

The Young Turks and the Ottoman Nationalities

—Yücel Yanıkdag˘, author of Healing the Nation: Prisoners of War, Medicine, and Nationalism in Turkey, 1914–1939

Armenians, Greeks, Albanians, Jews, and Arabs, 1908–1918 Feroz Ahmad eBook 978-1-60781-338-5 Paper 978-1-60781-339-2 $25.00s

“The book is useful for students of Turkish nationalism and can

A Religion, Not a State

information can only be obtained by sifting through several

Ali ‘Abd al-Raziq’s Islamic Justification of Political Secularism Souad T. Ali eBook 978-1-60781-951-6 Paper 978-0-87480-951-0 $25.00s

be used for undergraduate classrooms or as a reference book for the genealogy of Turkish nationalist thought. Currently, such outdated books.” —Hakan Özoğlu, director of Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Central Florida

February 2016  272 pp., 6 x 9 eBook 978-1-60781-466-5  Paper 978-1-60781-465-8 $25.00s

ORDERS: 800-621-2736 WWW.UOFUPRESS.COM

An Intellectual History of Turkish Nationalism

9


THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS SPRING/SUMMER 2016

10

new books

Environment /Stegner Lectures

Against All Odds

How America’s Century-old Quest for Clean Air May Spur a New Era of Global Environmental Cooperation Robert V. Percival

H

ealthy air quality is a growing global concern. Robert Percival discusses the critical junctures in U.S.

environmental history that have led to global environmental regulation, particularly in relation to China. According to the World Health Organization in 2013, more than one million people die every year in China from exposure to air pollution. Referencing historical U.S. air quality achievements, particularly the Clean Air Act, Percival points toward a turning point in China’s legislation and attitude towards this environmental issue.

ROBERT V. PERCIVAL is the Robert F. Stanton Professor of Law and director of the Environmental Law Program at the University of Maryland’s Carey School of Law.

March 2016 42 pp., 5V x 8V, 4 Illustrations Paper 978-1-60781-493-1 $7.95

More lectures from the Stegner Center for Land, Resources and the Environment

Past and Future Yellowstones

Finding Our Way in Wonderland Paul Schullery

Drawing on historical perspectives, personal excursions, and decades of professional research and work in the field, Paul Schullery illuminates the possible truths embedded within the natural and cultural reality that is Yellowstone National Park, celebrating both the park’s history and its potential as a laboratory of ideas. Paper 978-1-60781-430-6 $7.95

The Emerging Alliance of Religion and Ecology Mary Evelyn Tucker The environmental crisis is most frequently viewed through the lenses of science, policy, law, and economics, while moral and spiritual dimensions of this crisis are becoming more visible. Indeed, world religions are bringing their texts and traditions and their ethics and practices into dialogue with environmental problems. Tucker explores this growing movement and highlights why it holds great promise for the long-term flourishing of the Earth community. Paper 978-1-60781-357-6 $7.95


new books

Poetry

Davis McCombs

D

rawn from the rich folk traditions of his native Kentucky as well as the folklore of his adopted Ozark

Mountains of Arkansas, the poems in Davis McCombs’s third collection exist along the fraught lines where nature and agriculture collide or in those charged moments where modernity intrudes on an archaic world. These poems celebrate out-of-the-way places, the lore of plants, wild animals and their unknowable lives, and nearly forgotten ways of being and talking and doing. Rendered in a language of great lexical juxtapositions, here are days of soil and labor, nights lit only by firelight, and the beings, possibly not of this world, lured like moths to a flame. McCombs, always a poet of place and of rootedness, writes poems teetering between two locales, one familiar but achingly distant, one bewildering but alluringly present.

Winner of the 2015 Agha Shahid Ali Poetry Prize DAVIS MCCOMBS is the author of two previous collections of poetry. His first book, Ultima Thule, was chosen by W. S. Merwin as the winner of the 1999 Yale Series of Younger Poets. It was also a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. His second book, Dismal Rock, was awarded the Dorset Prize, the Eric Hoffer Award, and the Kentucky Literary Award. McCombs directs the Program in Creative Writing and Translation at the University of Arkansas.

Also of Interest

“In thirty-eight haunting poems, McCombs offers that something to us—a wholeness attained not only through the stories and traditions of a culture but through the fusion of poet and place, poet and past. Here are the caves and petroglyphs, the widows and children and workers, the animals of legend and the animals of the fields. Unwavering precision is a hallmark of McCombs’s lore, descriptive, figurative, tonal, emotional: all of poetry’s rooms are lit by his lyric accuracy. ” —Linda Bierds, author of Roget’s Illusion

Spectator

Kara Candito eBook 978-1-60781-352-1 Paper 978-1-60781-351-4 $12.95

The Rival

Sara Wallace eBook 978-1-60781-424-5 Paper 978-1-60781-423-8 $14.95

Praise for Ultima Thule: “Translucent, musical language. Urgent images that strikingly illuminate darkened interior spaces.” —The New York Times

Praise for Dismal Rock: “McCombs is wonderful with details. A careful poet who looks thoroughly.” —Publishers Weekly

April 2015  80 pp., 5V x 8V, 2 illustrations eBook 978-1-60781-482-5  Paper 978-1-60781-481-8 $14.95

ORDERS: 800-621-2736 WWW.UOFUPRESS.COM

lore

11


new books

Archaeology/Zoology/Wildlife Biology

THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS SPRING/SUMMER 2016

12

Zooarchaeology and Field Ecology A Photographic Atlas

Jack M. Broughton and Shawn D. Miller This photographic atlas, developed over twenty years of teaching in the field, expedites the work of the zooarchaeologist by integrating both osteology and wildlife ecology into a single volume. Zooarchaeology, the study of animal remains found at archaeological sites, is interdisciplinary in nature, requiring students and researchers to not only master the technical skills of identifying fragmentary bones and teeth but also of developing a deep understanding of the taxonomy, natural history, behavior, and ecology of the species identified. Until now, these topics have always been treated separately. This book is the only field guide and laboratory manual to combine animal ecology and natural history with the

The only field guide and laboratory manual to cover both the osteology and the natural history of western North American vertebrates in a single volume detailed osteology of all the vertebrate classes (fishes, amphibians, birds, and mammals) and all the primary orders native to western North America. Skeletal images are shown at a variety of magnifications and views and Also of Interest

are accompanied by photographs of the animals in their characteristic habitats.

JACK M. BROUGHTON is a professor of anthropology at the University of Utah, where he teaches archaeology, osteology, and zooarchaeology and holds an adjunct appointment in vertebrate zoology at the Natural History Museum of Utah.

Late Holocene Research on Foragers and Farmers in the Desert West Edited by Barbara J. Roth and Maxine E. McBrinn eBook 978-1-60781-447-4 Cloth 978-1-60781-446-7 $50.00s

Ice, Fire, and Nutcrackers

A Rocky Mountain Ecology George Constantz eBook 978-1-60781-363-7 Paper 978-1-60781-362-0 $24.95

SHAWN D. MILLER is an associate instructor of biology at the University of Utah and will receive his PhD in biological anthropology at the end of 2015. He is a coauthor of the Atlas of Human Anatomy, the educational software Real Anatomy, and the Human Anatomy Interactive Atlas.

“Contains a wealth of information useful to vertebrate paleo­ zoologists and also to forensic wildlife biologists. A rigorously scientific treatment. The book is superb; the photographs are excellent.” —R. Lee Lyman, chair of the Department of Anthropology, University of Missouri–Columbia

“No other book (or website for that matter) treats all the vertebrates from western North America in such a comprehensive fashion. This book fills an important niche.” —Virginia L. Butler, professor of anthropology, Portland State University

April 2016  224 pp., 8V x 11, 263 Illustrations eBook 978-1-60781-486-3  Paper 978-1-60781-485-6 $40.00s


new books

Linguistics

Kerry Hull

O

f extant languages, Ch’orti’ Mayan is the closest to ancient Maya hieroglyphic script, but it is a language

that is decreasing in usage. In southern Guatemala where it is spoken, many children no longer learn it, as Spanish now dominates most experiences. From linguistic and anthropological data gathered over many years, Kerry Hull has created the largest and most complete Ch’orti’ Mayan dictionary to date. With nearly 9,000 entries, this trilingual dictionary of Ch’orti’, Spanish, and English preserves ancient words and concepts that were vital to this culture in the past.

A comprehensive dictionary of the endangered Ch’orti’ Mayan language of southern Guatemala, with entries in Ch’orti’, Spanish, and English

Each entry contains examples of Ch’orti’ sentences

along with their translations. Each term is defined grammatically and linked to a grammatical index. Variations due to age and region are noted. Additionally, extensive cultural and linguistic annotations accompany many entries, providing detailed looks into Ch’orti’ daily life, mythology, flora and fauna, healing, ritual, and food. Hull worked closely with native speakers, including traditional ritual

Also of Interest

specialists, and presents that work here in a way that is easily accessible to scholars and laypersons alike.

KERRY HULL is a professor in the Department of Ancient Scripture at Brigham Young University. He is author of An Abbreviated Dictionary of Ch’orti’ Mayan and coeditor of Ch’orti’ Maya Area: Past and Present and of Parallel Worlds: Genre, Discourse, and Poetics in Contemporary, Colonial, and Classic Maya Literature.

Language and Ethnicity among the K’ichee’ Maya Sergio Romero eBook 978-1-60781-398-9 Cloth 978-1-60781-397-2 $50.00s

competent linguist, but one who is a fluent speaker of the Ch’orti’ language. More importantly, he is meticulously careful with the data.”

Lacandon Maya-Spanish-English Dictionary Charles Andrew Hofling eBook 978-1-60781-342-2 Cloth 978-1-60781-341-5 $70.00s

“Professor Hull’s dictionary is the product of one who is not only a

—John S. Robertson, emeritus professor of linguistics, Brigham Young University

“Thorough, systematic, well researched, and easy to use. This dictionary will be the standard used by me and anyone else interested in the Ch’orti’ language.” —Brent Metz, Department of Anthropology, University of Kansas

April 2016  480 pp., 8V x 11 eBook 978-1-60781-490-0  Cloth 978-1-60781-489-4 $80.00s

ORDERS: 800-621-2736 WWW.UOFUPRESS.COM

A Dictionary of Ch’orti’ Mayan– Spanish–English

13


Archaeology/American Indian Studies

new books

THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS SPRING/SUMMER 2016

14

Pisskan

Interpreting First Peoples Bison Kills at Heritage Parks Edited by Leslie B. Davis and John W. Fisher Jr.

T

ranslating professional archaeological research into meaningful and thoughtful educational experiences

for the public has taken on increased urgency in recent years. This book presents eight case studies by professional archaeologists who discuss innovative approaches and advances in research methodology while examining the myriad challenges associated with interpreting this work for the public. Each study focuses on a particular Native American bison-kill site and shares the unique path from archaeological investigation to the creation of a public interpretive facility. Collectively they comprise a comprehensive exploration of the multifaceted linkages between archaeological research and public education— ranging in scope from the interrelationships of an interpretive facility with its surrounding communities to the

A comprehensive exploration of the interplay of archaeological research and public education at ancient North American bison-kill sites nuances of explaining bone decomposition to site visitors. These examples provide valuable insights from which

Also of Interest

archaeologists and science interpreters of all disciplines can conceptualize and build their own educational programs.

LESLIE B. DAVIS (1935–2014) was an emeritus professor of anthropology at Montana State University and curator of archaeology for the Museum of the Rockies at Montana State University. JOHN W. (JACK) FISHER JR. is an associate professor of anthropology at Montana State University.

The First Rocky Mountaineers Coloradans before Colorado Marcel Kornfeld eBook 978-1-60781-263-0 Cloth 978-1-60781-262-3 $65.00s

Rancher Archaeologist

A Career in Two Different Worlds George C. Frison eBook 978-1-60781-330-9 Cloth 978-1-60781-329-3 $45.00s

“This is the first book to deal with this topic. People working on heritage interpretation and site development will find it useful, as will the general reader interested in the topic of bison kills.” —Brian Reeves, Western Canada Cultural Resource Management and Interpretation specialist

“A nice assemblage of articles on important bison jump sites written by the most prominent experts in this field. The authors are all top notch.” —Sara Scott, Heritage Resources program manager, Montana State Parks

March 2016  288 pp., 7 x 10, 92 Illustrations, 13 maps eBook 978-1-60781-474-0  Paper 978-1-60781-473-3 $50.00s


Archaeology/American Indian Studies

new books

Wickiups, Trade Goods, and the Final Years of the Autonomous Ute Curtis Martin

T

he study of the last remaining Ute wickiups, or brush shelters, along with the historic artifacts found with them

has revealed an understudied chapter of Native American history—the early years of contact with European invaders and the final years of Ute sovereignty. Ephemeral Bounty is the result of this research and its findings on the protohistoric and early historic Ute Indians of Colorado. The Colorado Wickiup Project has documented ephemeral wooden features such as wickiups, tree platforms, and brush horse corrals that remain scattered throughout the mesas, canyons, and mountains of the state. They date from European newcomers.

An archaeological study of ephemeral wooden structures reveals new information on the final chapter of autonomous Ute history in Colorado The project is unique in using metal detection, historic trade ware analysis, and tree-ring dating of metal ax–cut wickiup poles to distinguish the Ute sites from historic Euro–American ones. Researchers have demonstrated that

Also of Interest

not all Utes left Colorado for the reservations in Utah during the “final removal” in 1881, as has been generally believed. A significant number remained on their homelands well into the early decades of the twentieth century, with new tools and weapons, but building brush shelters and living much as they had for generations.

As If the Land Owned Us

An Ethnohistory of the White Mesa Utes Robert S. McPherson Paper 978-1-60781-145-9 $29.95

Troubled Trails

CURTIS MARTIN is a research archaeologist for Grand River Institute and Dominquez Archaeological Research Group, Inc., both in Grand Junction, Colorado. He is the principal investigator for the Colorado Wickiup Project, which received the 2014 Governor’s Award in recognition of the project.

“A wealth of new data, written in a relaxed and readable style.” —Michael Metcalf, Metcalf Archaeological Consultants, Inc.

The Meeker Affair and the Expulsion of Utes from Colorado Robert Silbernagel Paper 978-1-60781-129-9 $24.95

“The study adds an important component to the late cultural history of the Colorado Utes, one that has almost escaped notice by white documentarians. It also provides a blueprint for the study of wickiups and related timber structures, one that has been honed by the team’s long-standing investigation in the field and that may be applied from Alaska to Patagonia—anywhere that people have built shelters at high altitudes.” —W. Raymond Wood, professor emeritus of anthropology at the University of Missouri and author of A White-Bearded Plainsman

March 2016  192 pp., 7 x 10, 59 Illustrations, 20 maps eBook 978-1-60781-468-9  Paper 978-1-60781-467-2 $45.00s

ORDERS: 800-621-2736 WWW.UOFUPRESS.COM

Ephemeral Bounty

15


new books

THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS SPRING/SUMMER 2016

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Philosophy

The Tanner Lectures on Human Values Volume 35

Edited by Mark Matheson

T

he Tanner Lectures on Human Values, founded July 1, 1978, at Clare Hall, Cambridge University, was

established by the American scholar, industrialist, and philanthropist Obert Clark Tanner. Lectureships are awarded to outstanding scholars or leaders in broadly defined fields of human values and transcend ethnic, national, religious, or ideological distinctions. Volume 35 features lectures given during the academic year 2014 to 2015 at the University of Oxford; University of California, Berkeley; the University of Michigan; Princeton University; Stanford University; the University of Utah; and Yale University. DANIELLE ALLEN, director of the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics and professor of Government, Harvard University “Education and Equality” ELIZABETH ANDERSON, Arthur F. Thurnau Professor and John Dewey Distinguished University Professor of Philosophy and Women’s Studies at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor “Liberty, Equity, and Private Government”

Also of Interest

MARGARET ATWOOD, award-winning poet and novelist “Human Values in an Age of Change” DIPESH CHAKRABARTY, Lawrence A. Kimpton Distinguished Service Professor of History, South Asian Languages and Civilizations, The University of Chicago “The Human Condition in the Anthropocene” RUTH BADER GINSBURG associate justice of the United States Supreme Court “A Conversation with Ruth Bader Ginsburg”

The Tanner Lectures on Human Values

Volume 34 Edited by Mark Matheson eBook 978-1-60781-428-3 Cloth 978-1-60781-427-6 $35.00

The Tanner Lectures on Human Values

Volume 33 Edited by Mark Matheson eBook 978-1-60781-390-7 Cloth 978-1-60781-349-1 $35.00

PHILIP PETTIT, L. S. Rockefeller University Professor of Politics and Human Values at Princeton University “The Birth of Ethics” ERIC L. SANTNER, Philip and Ida Romberg Distinguished Service Professor in Modern Germanic Studies at the University of Chicago “The Weight of All Flesh: On the Subject Matter of Political Economy” PETER SINGER, Ira W. DeCamp Professor of Bioethics in the University Center for Human Values “From Moral Neutrality to Effective Altruism: The Changing Scope and Significance of Moral Philosophy”

July 2016  436 pp, 6 x 9, 3 illustrations Cloth 978-1-60781-498-6 $35.00s


distribution partner

Tanner Trust Fund

David L. Bigler on the Mormons and the West David L. Bigler Edited by Will Bagley

T

he contrast between Utah’s Native and frontier cultures and its religious roots make the state’s history contested

ground. In this collection of his short works, David L. Bigler accepts a historian’s obligation to be as strictly honest and as balanced as possible. His crisp, engaging narratives seek to recreate an authentic image of the past that help us comprehend the hopes and aims of all who lived it.

DAVID L. BIGLER was born in the Great Basin in 1927 and is a veteran of World War II and the Korean War. He retired as director of public affairs for U.S. Steel in 1986 to pursue history full time. His seven books and many articles on early Utah, California, and western history have received awards from Westerners International, the Mormon History Association, and Western Writers of America.

287 pp., 6 B/i x 9 B/e 17 illustrations and maps Cloth 978-0-692-37120-6 $29.95

A Winter with the Mormons

The 1852 Letters of Jotham Goodell Edited by David L. Bigler Preface by George Miles

“With much regret we had been compelled to turn aside from our journey, and spend the winter among the Mormons,” Oregon overland emigrant Jotham Goodell recalled in 1852. “Having been compelled to this decision, I resolved to pass the winter as quietly as possible.” Goodell’s winter with the Mormons turned out to be anything but peaceful. Cloth 978-1-56085-161-5 $24.95

A Mormon Mother An Autobiography

Annie Clark Tanner “This autobiography is the story of a beautiful and gifted woman who freely chose to live as a second wife to a brilliant teacher she met while attending Brigham Young University. Her marriage took place in 1883 when polygamy, or ‘plural marriage,’ was widely practiced and strongly defended by the Mormon religion.” These are the words of Obert Tanner, Annie Clark Tanner’s tenth child, who introduces this significant contribution to Mormon history. Paper 978-0-941-21431-5 $19.95

ORDERS: 800-621-2736 WWW.UOFUPRESS.COM

Confessions of a Revisionist Historian

17


THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS SPRING/SUMMER 2016

18

Hiking the Escalante Rudi Lambrechtse

Edited by James H. Pickering

This book invites exploration of

National Park Readers, Lance Newman and David Stanley, series editors

featured backlist

New Edition

The Rocky Mountain National Park Reader

the Escalante, a highly scenic

Last Chance Byway The History of Nine Mile Canyon

Jerry D. Spangler and Donna Kemp Spangler Nine Mile Canyon is famous the world over for its prehistoric rock art and remnants of ancient Fremont habitation. But it also

area of meandering canyons

This collection celebrates one

with relatively few marked trails.

teems with Old West history that

of America’s most loved places,

It lists fifty hikes by degree of

is salted with iconic figures of the

Rocky Mountain National

difficulty and includes directions

nineteenth and early twentieth

Park, which marked its 100th

to trailheads, instructions for

centuries. Last Chance Byway tells

anniversary in 2015. Engagement

following particular routes,

the stories of human endeavor

with place and the events that

choices of side canyons along

and folly in a place historians

loom large in park history are

the way, suggestions for loop

have long ignored. Some who left

underlying themes that connect

hikes, and occasional alternative

their mark include famed outlaw

the thirty-three selections that

destinations. Along with hike

hunter Joe Bush, infamous bounty

make up this anthology.

hunter Jack Watson, the larger-

descriptions, the book provides information on the geology,

The voices that speak to us are

natural history, and human

distinctive and all capture and

history of the area. This new

share a part of the national

edition contains seven new hikes,

treasure that is Rocky Mountain

new photographs, and updated

National Park. This original

information about hike terrain.

collection is a rich literary and

248 pp., 5 ½ x 8 ½ 130 illustrations, 5 maps eBook 978-1-60781-464-1 Paper 978-1-60781-463-4 $16.95

historical compendium that introduces the nation’s twelfth national park. 328 pp., 6 x 9 eBook 978-1-60781-452-8 Paper 978-1-60781-451-1 $17.95

than-life cattle baron Preston Nutter, and Robert Leroy Parker, better known as Butch Cassidy. 352 pp., 8 ½ x 10 188 illustrations, 13 maps eBook 978-1-60781-443-6 Paper 978-1-60781-442-9 $34.95


19 ORDERS: 800-621-2736 WWW.UOFUPRESS.COM

Bridging the Distance

The Railroad and the Pueblo Indians

Folklore, the Hypermodern, and

Edited by David B. Danbom

Topeka and Santa Fe on the

the Etheral

Foreword by David Kennedy

Edited by Jeannie Banks Thomas

Published in cooperation with the Bill Lane Center for the American West, Stanford University

This book explores zombies,

Common Issues of the Rural West

The Impact of the Atchison, Pueblos of the Rio Grande, 1880-1930 Richard H. Frost Richard Frost examines the

vampires, witches, demented

featured backlist

Putting the Supernatural in Its Place

nuns, mediums, and ghosts in

As David Kennedy points out in

profound effects that the coming

their natural (and unnatural)

his foreword, the West was once

of trains had on Pueblo Indians in

habitats while making sense

seen as a beacon of opportunity

New Mexico’s Rio Grande Valley,

of the current ubiquity of the

and it is still a place where many

where their arrival was a social

supernatural on the Internet, in

ways of life can flourish. But it

and cultural tsunami. The pueblos

movies, tourism, and in places

is also a region that leaves some

responded variously, though

like New Orleans. This unique

people isolated both culturally

mostly conservatively, to sustain

study of how we locate the

and geographically. The essays

their threatened communities,

supernatural sheds light on why

collected here consider the

and this book spotlights two very

certain sites and their stories

problems and prospects of the

different responses: defensive

captivate us. It demonstrates how

rural West and its residents.

and accommodating. Overlooked

pondering the supernatural can

Fresh, informative, and

aspects of these pueblos’ histories

bring a better understanding of

insightful, Bridging the Distance

provide compelling reasons

the places we create and inhabit.

will spur conversations and the

behind their varying responses

search for solutions to complex

and the fateful consequences.

problems.

280 pp., 6 x 9 23 illustrations, 2 maps eBook 978-1-60781-441-2 Cloth 978-1-60781-440-5 $34.95

240 pp., 6 x 9 56 illustrations eBook 978-1-60781-450-4 Paper 978-1-60781-449-8 $24.95

312 pp., 6 x 9 17 illustrations, 4 maps eBook 978-1-60781-456-6 Paper 978-1-60781-455-9 $30.00s


THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS SPRING/SUMMER 2016

20

War and Collapse

Discovery Site at Johnson Farm

Edited by M. Hakan Yavuz with Feroz Ahmad

featured backlist

Tracks in Deep Time The St. George Dinosaur Jerald D. Harris and Andrew R. C. Milner This book presents an engaging, thoroughly readable account of the history, geology, and paleontology of the St. George Dinosaur Discovery site. Unusual fossils found here include the world’s largest collection of tracks left by swimming dinosaurs and one of only six traces known to have been made by a sitting, meat-eating dinosaur. With approachable text and lavish, full-color photographs and illustrations, Jerald Harris and Andrew Milner describe how geologists and paleontologists have painstakingly reconstructed a vivid snapshot of life in the Early Jurassic. 96 pp., 8 ½ x 10 33 full-color illustrations eBook 978-1-60781-438-2 Paper 978-1-60781-437-5 $10.95

World War I and the Ottoman State

War and Collapse is the third volume in a series that covers the last years of the Ottoman Empire. It stems from a three-day international conference at which scholars examined the causes and consequences of World War I, with a focus on how these events pertained to the Ottoman state and society. Fifty-three scholars contribute to this collection, explaining what happened within the Ottoman Empire before and during WWI and how ethnic and national groups constructed these events to enhance their identities and promote their interests. 1500 pp., 6 x 9 3 illustrations, 9 maps eBook 978-1-60781-462-7 Cloth 978-1-60781-461-0 $75.00s

Tracing the Relational

The Archaeology of Worlds, Spirits, and Temporalities Edited by Meghan E. Buchanan and B. Jacob Skousen Foundations of Archaeological Inquiry James M. Skibo, series editor Contributors to this innovative volume argue that in order to gain deeper insight into how people in the ancient world experienced and negotiated their lives, archaeologists must explore the myriad relationships and entanglements between humans and other beings, places, and things. As contributors unravel these relationships, they demonstrate that movement is an inherent feature of these relational webs and is the driving force behind a continually shifting reality. Chapters focus on various regions and time periods throughout the Americas, tracing how movements between otherworldly dimensions, spirits and deities, and temporalities were integral to everyday life. 200 pp., 7 x 10 28 illustrations, 14 maps eBook 978-1-60781-436-8 Paper 978-1-60781-435-1 $45.00s


21 ORDERS: 800-621-2736 WWW.UOFUPRESS.COM

Sending the Spirits Home

The Awkward State of Utah

Mortuary Practices

1896-1945

Investment

Glen E. Rice

Edited by Laura L. Scheiber and María Nieves Zedeño

Winner of the Don D. and Catherine S. Fowler Prize

Charles S. Peterson and Brian Q. Cannon

Humans have occupied mountain

This data-rich monograph

environments and relied on

provides new and stimulating

mountain resources since the

perspectives on the Hohokam

terminal Pleistocene. Their

people and their mortuary

continuous interaction with

practices. It breaks new ground

the land from generation to

by using the knowledge of

generation has left material

descendent peoples to generate

imprints ranging from

archaeologically testable

anthropogenic fires to vision

hypotheses, demonstrating

quest sites. The diverse case

the need for mortuary analyses

studies presented in this

conducted at a regional scale,

collection explore the material

and synthesizing the interaction

record of North American

of beliefs, ideology, social

mountain dwellers and habitual

organization, and ecology in

users of high-elevation resources.

determining Hohokam mortuary

Contributors look creatively at the

practices. Various chapters

significance of social investment,

discuss body treatment, mortuary

addressing landscape engineering

furniture and goods, mortuary

at different times using diverse,

architecture, and cemeteries.

theoretical standpoints and

Numerous figures help document

archaeological, historical, and

the variability of Hohokam

ethnographic data from varied

practices.

mountain environments.

240 pp., 7 x 10 89 illustrations, 11 maps eBook 978-1-60781-460-3 Cloth 978-1-60781-459-7 $60.00s

An Anthropology of Social

264 pp., 6 B/i x 9 W 33 illustrations, 24 maps eBook 978-1-60781-434-4 Paper 978-1-60781-433-7 $45.00s

The Archaeology of Hohokam

Coming of Age in the Nation,

Copublished with the Utah State Historical Society The half century between statehood in 1896 and the end of World War II in 1945 was a period of transformation and transition for Utah. This book interprets those profound changes, revealing sweeping

featured backlist

Engineering Mountain Landscapes

impacts on both institutions and ordinary people. Drawing upon expertise honed over decades of teaching, researching, and

writing about Utah’s history, the

authors incorporate fresh archival sources, new oral histories, and hundreds of scholarly articles and books as they narrate the

little-known story of the crucial

formative years when Utah came of age. 344 pp., 7 x 10 30 illustrations eBook 978-1-60781-422-1 $24.00 Paper 978-1-60781-421-4 $29.95


Latter-day Lore

Ballet West

Edited by Erica Al. Eliason and Tom Mould

Edited by Adam Sklute

Mormon Folklore Studies

eBook 978-1-60781-285-2 Paper 978-1-60781-284-5 $34.95

essential backlist

THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS SPRING/SUMMER 2016

22

Nels Anderson’s World War I Diary Edited by Allan Kent Powell

Foreword by Charles S. Peterson

A Fifty-Year Celebration Cloth 978-1-60781-376-7 $39.95

The Electric Edge of Academe

The Saga of Lucien L. Nunn and Deep Springs College L. Jackson Newell eBook 978-1-60781-407-8 Cloth 978-1-60781-406-1 $39.95

Hiking the Wasatch

The Hayduke Trail

John Veranth eBook 978-1-60781-326-2 Paper 978-1-60781-325-5 $16.95

Drama, Decadence, and Dissipation along Ogden’s Rowdiest Road Val Holley eBook 978-1-60781-270-8 Paper 978-1-60781-269-2 $24.95 Cloth 978-1-60781-268-5 $44.95

eBook 978-1-60781-256-2 Cloth 978-1-60781-255-6 $34.95

Third Edition

25th Street Confidential

A Guide to the Backcountry Hiking Trail on the Colorado Plateau Joe Mitchell and Mike Coronella

Paper 978-0-87480-813-1 $19.95

True Valor

Barney Clark and the Utah Artificial Heart Don B. Olsen eBook 978-1-60781-392-7 Cloth 978-1-60781-391-0 $44.95

Gasa Gasa Girl Goes to Camp

A Nisei Youth behind a World War II Fence Lily Yuriko Nakai Havey eBook 978-1-60781-345-3 Cloth 978-1-60781-343-9 $29.95

We Remember, We Celebrate, We Believe /Recuerdo, Celebración, y Esperanza Latinos in Utah

Armando Solórzano eBook 978-1-60781-359-0 Paper 978-1-60781-358-3 $19.95

Where Roads Will Never Reach Wilderness and Its Visionaries in the Northern Rockies

Frederick H. Swanson eBook 978-1-60781-405-4 Paper 978-1-60781-404-7 $24.95

Rediscovering National Parks in the Spirit of John Muir Michael Frome eBook 978-1-60781-419-1 Paper 978-1-60781-418-4 $24.95

Requiem for the Living A Memoir

Jeff Metcalf eBook 978-1-60781-387-3 Paper 978-1-60781-386-6 $21.95

Final Light

The Life and Art of Doug Snow Edited by Frank McEntire eBook 978-1-60781-253-1 Cloth 978-1-60781-252-4 $26.95

Opening Zion

A Scrapbook of the National Park’s First Official Tourists John Clark and Melissa Clark Paper 978-1-60781-006-3 $19.95


23

The Rise of Interpretation in the First National Park Stephen G. Biddulph eBook 978-1-60781-247-0 Cloth 978-1-60781-257-9 $39.95 Paper 978-1-60781-246-3 $24.95

Man of God, Son of Thunder Harold Schindler Paper 978-0-87480-440-9 $21.95

Plain but Wholesome

EBook 978-1-60781-315-6 Paper 978-1-60781-314-9 $19.95

Roy Webb

Brock Cheney

eBook 978-1-60781-214-2 Paper 978-1-60781-179-4 $21.95

eBook 978-1-60781-209-8 Paper 978-1-60781-208-1 $19.95

Outlawing Genocide Denial

The Turk in America

Sasun

Guenter Lewy

Justin A. McCarthy

eBook 978-1-60781-374-3 Paper 978-1-60781-372-9 $24.95

eBook 978-1-60781-966-0 Paper 978-1-60781-013-1 $39.95

Native Wills from the Colonial Americas

Religion on the Rocks

Aaron M. Wright

David H. DeJong

Edited by Mark Christensen and Jonathan Truitt

eBook 978-1-60781-426-9 Paper 978-1-60781-425-2 $40.00s

eBook 978-1-60781-417-7 Cloth 978-1-60781-416-0 $55.00s

“Thirty-seven Days of Peril” and a Handwritten Account of Being Lost Truman Everts

Edited by Lee H. Whittlesey

Paper 978-1-60781-429-0 $14.95

Tony Hillerman’s Navajoland

Hideouts, Haunts, and Havens in the Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee Mysteries Expanded Third 
Edition

Laurance D. Linford Paper 978-1-60781-137-4 $21.95

Life’s Journey– Zuya

Oral Teachings from Rosebud Albert White Hat Sr. Compiled and edited by John Cunningham

eBook 978-1-60781-216-6 Paper 978-1-60781-184-8 $24.95

American Indian Treaties

A Guide to Ratified and Unratified Colonial, U.S., State, Foreign, and Intertribal Treaties and Agreements, 1607–1911

Stories from Grand Canyon History Don Lago

The Dilemmas of Official Historical Truth

Dead Giveaways in a New World

The Story before Flaming Gorge Dam

The Creation of an Enduring Prejudice

Hohokam Rock Art, Ritual Practice, and Social Transformation eBook 978-1-60781-365-1 Cloth 978-1-60781-364-4 $65.00s

Foodways of the Mormon Pioneers

essential backlist

Orrin Porter Rockwell

Lost Canyons of the Green River

Lost in the Yellowstone, New Edition

Canyon of Dreams

ORDERS: 800-621-2736 WWW.UOFUPRESS.COM

Five Old Men of Yellowstone

The History of an 1890s Armenian Revolt Justin McCarthy, Ömer Turan, and Cemalettin Taşkıran

eBook 978-1-60781-385-9 Cloth 978-1-60781-384-2 $32.00s

Rivers, Fish, and the People

Tradition, Science, and Historical Ecology of Fisheries in the American West Edited by Pei-Lin Yu eBook 978-1-60781-400-9 Paper 978-1-60781-399-6 $40.00s


Where the Earth and Sky Are Sewn Together

Sobaipuri-O’odham Contexts of Contact and Colonialism Deni J. Seymour eBook978-1-60781-213-5 Cloth 978-1-60781-067-4 $60.00s

essential backlist

THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS SPRING/SUMMER 2016

24

Tracks in the Amazon

The Day-to-Day Life of the Workers on the Madeira-Mamore Railroad Gary Neeleman and Rose Neeleman eBook 978-1-60781-276-0 Paper 978-1-60781-275-3 $29.95

Home Waters

A Year of Recompenses on the Provo River

An 1860 EnglishHopi Vocabulary Written in the Deseret Alphabet Kenneth R. Beesley and Dirk Elzinga

Becoming White Clay

A History and Archaeology of Jicarilla Apache Enclavement B. Sunday Eiselt

Traces of Fremont Society and Rock Art in Ancient Utah

Text by Steven R. Simms Photographs by François Gohier

eBook 978-1-60781-354-5 Paper 978-1-60781-353-8 $19.95

Cloth 978-1-60781-193-0

Paper 978-1-60781-011-7 $24.95

Immigrants in the Far West

When the White House Calls

The Utah Prairie Dog

Historical Identities and Experiences

Edited by Jessie L. Embry and Brian Q. Cannon

$45.00

From Immigrant Entrepreneur to U.S. Ambassador

Life among the Red Rocks Theodore G. Manno

The Rock Art of Utah Polly Schaafsma Paper 978-0-87480-435-5 $22.00

What’s Nature Worth?

Narrative Expressions of Environmental Values

John Price

Photography by Elaine Miller Bond

Edited by Terre Satterfield and Scott Slovic

eBook 978-1-60781-381-1 Paper 978-1-60781-380-4 $29.00s

eBook 978-1-60781-395-8 Cloth 978-1-60781-143-5 $30.00

eBook 978-1-60781-367-5 Paper 978-1-60781-366-8 $24.95

Paper 978-0-87480-790-5 $24.95

Seven Summers

Sushi in Cortez

Wildbranch

Scrap Iron

A Naturalist Homesteads in the Modern West

George B. Handley

Julia Corbett

eBook 978-1-60781-967-7 Paper 978-1-60781-023-0 $24.95

eBook 978-1-60781-250-0 Paper 978-1-60781-249-4 $19.95

Interdisciplinary Essays on Mesa Verde Edited by David Taylor and Steve Wolverton eBook 978-1-60781-413-9 Paper 978-1-60781-412-2 $19.95

An Anthology of Nature, Environmental, and Place-based Writing Edited by Florence Caplow and Susan A. Cohen Paper 978-1-60781-124-4 $17.95

Mark Jay Brewin Jr. eBook 978-1-60781-259-3 Paper 978-1-60781-258-6 $12.95


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