

★ 2023 J. Franklin Jameson Award
American Historical Association
CODEX SIERRA
A Nahuatl-Mixtec Book of Accounts from Colonial Mexico
By Kevin Terraciano
$65.00 Hardcover 978-0-8061-6847-0
★ 2024 Ermine WheelerVoegelin Book Award
American Society of Ethnohistory
BETWEEN THE FLOODS
A History of the Arikaras
By Mark van de Logt
$45.00 Hardcover 978-0-8061-9173-7
$29.95 Paperback 978-0-8061-9490-5
★ Best First Book (New Mexico)
2024 New MexicoArizona Book Awards
★ 2024 Oklahoma Book Award Finalist
Oklahoma Center for the Book
CORN DANCE
Inspired First American Cuisine
By Loretta Barrett Oden with Beth Dooley
$34.95 Hardcover 978-0-8061-9078-5
★ 2024 Kansas Notable Book
State Library of Kansas
ABOLITIONIST OF THE MOST DANGEROUS KIND
James Montgomery and His War on Slavery
By Todd Mildfelt and David D. Schafer
$45.00 Hardcover 978-0-8061-9290-1
★ 2024 Theodore Saloutos Book Award
Agricultural History Society
★ Best History Book (Arizona)
2024 New Mexico-Arizona Book Awards Finalist
COW TALK
Work, Ecology, and Range Cattle Ranchers in the Postwar Mountain West By Michelle K. Berry
$65.00 Hardcover 978-0-8061-9178-2
$29.95 Paperback 978-0-8061-9191-1
★ 2024 John M. Carroll Literary Award
Little Bighorn Associates
A LIFE CUT SHORT AT THE LITTLE BIG HORN
U.S. Army Surgeon George E. Lord By Todd E. Harburn
$34.95 Hardcover 978-0-8061-9158-4
$29.95 Paperback 978-0-8061-9484-4
★ Armitage-Jameson Book Prize
Coalition for Western Women’s History
MAKING RELATIVES OF THEM Native Kinship, Politics, and Gender in the Great Lakes Country, 1790–1850 By Rebecca Kugel
$36.95 Hardcover 978-0-8061-9282-6
★ 2024 Tejas Foco Non-Fiction Book Award
National Association for Chicana and Chicano Studies
★ 2024 Outstanding Book Award
Texas Association of Chicanos in Higher Education
RAZA SCHOOLS
The Fight for Latino Educational Autonomy in a West Texas
Borderlands Town
By Jesús Jesse Esparza
$95.00 Hardcover 978-0-8061-9271-0
$29.95 Paperback 978-0-8061-9272-7
One year in the life of a city— a year when everything happened
By Randy Krehbiel
2021: As the centennial of one of the nation’s worst race massacres approached, citizens of Tulsa faced the prospect with hope and dread. Hope that the anniversary would show Tulsa had changed since that day in 1921, when a white mob left the city’s thriving African American Greenwood neighborhood a smoldering ruin. Dread that Tulsa’s faults would be exposed as never before, its racism reinforced rather than mitigated. The anniversary—in the wake of COVID-19, a combustible presidential visit, and a nationwide explosion of racial tension—was even more fraught than expected. An extraordinary account of a city under inordinate pressure, Tulsa, 2021 offers a deeply informed, behindthe-scenes view of how Tulsans and Americans met that moment of crisis, and what the experience can tell us about racial politics today.
Following up on his book Tulsa, 1921, Randy Krehbiel brings a seasoned reporter’s keen eye and an insider’s understanding to the story of a city contending with racial and urban stresses that are both unique to Oklahoma and indicative of larger trends. The conflicts he uncovers were not split entirely along racial lines, but often revolved around the power of political messaging to shape public opinion. His detailed picture of Tulsa in 2021 reveals how politics, unacknowledged racism, and fear destroyed or damaged promising relationships between white Republican leaders and Black, mostly Democratic Tulsans.
In 1921, factions of whites and Blacks fought to control the narrative of the Tulsa Race Massacre. As Tulsa, 2021 dramatically demonstrates, the struggle continues to this day.
Randy Krehbiel has been a reporter for the Tulsa World since 1979 and now covers political and governmental affairs in Oklahoma and the United States. He is the author of Tulsa, 1921: Reporting a Massacre
APRIL
$29.95 HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-9532-2
312 PAGES, 6 X 9
10 B&W ILLUS.
CIVIL RIGHTS/AFRICAN AMERICAN/ U.S. HISTORY
TULSA, 1921
Reporting a Massacre
By Randy Krehbiel
$34.95 Hardcover 978-0-8061-6331-4
$21.95 Paperback 978-0-8061-6871-5
THE 1921 TULSA RACE MASSACRE
A Photographic History
By Karlos K. Hill
$39.95 Hardcover 978-0-8061-6856-2
MOST AMERICAN
Notes from a Wounded Place
By Rilla Askew
$19.95 Paperback 978-0-8061-5717-7
Over a century ago, a group of painters dreamed of establishing an artists’ colony in the village of Taos, New Mexico, and succeeded beyond their wildest imaginings. Founded in 1915 and disbanded in 1927, the Taos Society of Artists promoted painting that embraced the landscape of the Southwest and the local Pueblo and Hispanic people. This gorgeous two-volume set is the culmination of decades of scholarship by leading authorities in the field. Lavishly illustrated with more than 600 full-color illustrations, it is a fitting tribute to the groundbreaking artists of the society and their remarkable legacy.
Volume 1 depicts the origins of the society and its objectives, cultural context, and expanding importance in American art history. The essays that follow focus on the contributions of the society’s founding members: Joseph H. Sharp, E. Irving Couse, Bert G. Phillips, Ernest L. Blumenschein, Oscar E. Berninghaus, and W. Herbert Dunton.
Volume 2 explores the achievements of six other prominent artists who joined the society, as well as its associate and honorary members. The volume concludes with a detailed chronology of relevant events from 1850 to 1966.
Edited
by
Peter H. Hassrick
Gerald Peters
Melissa Webster Speidel
Foreword by Charles C. Eldredge
Peter H. Hassrick (1941–2019) was Director Emeritus and Senior Scholar at the Buffalo Bill Center of the West. He is the author, coauthor, or editor of numerous publications, including Frederic Remington: A Catalogue Raisonné II. Gallery owner and art collector Gerald Peters has mounted many art exhibitions and published articles and books, including American Art of the Taos School. Melissa Webster Speidel is an independent art historian and research associate on the Carl Rungius catalogue raisonné project. Charles C. Eldredge is Hall Distinguished Professor Emeritus of American Art and Culture at the University of Kansas.
THE AMERICAN WEST
JUNE
$200.00x HARDCOVER 2 VOLUME SET
978-0-8061-9494-3
840 PAGES, 9.75 X 12 649 COLOR ILLUS.
ART/U.S. HISTORY
◆ Comprehensive 2-volume set spanning more than 800 pages
◆ Features 649 full-color illustrations
◆ Luxurious cloth-bound volumes in slipcase with full-color tip-on and bookmark ribbons
◆ Published in cooperation with the Gerald Peters Gallery of Santa Fe, NM
Unique eyewitness accounts by university students and faculty of their service in the Great War
FEBRUARY
$29.95s HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-9527-8
262 PAGES, 6 X 9
12 B&W ILLUS.
HISTORY/U.S. HISTORY/MILITARY HISTORY
THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA
A History: Volume I, 1890–1917
By David W. Levy
$21.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-3976-0
THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA
A History, Volume II: 1917–1950
By David W. Levy
$34.95x Leather 978-0-8061-5161-8
$39.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-4903-5
$29.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-9000-6
BUD WILKINSON AND THE RISE OF OKLAHOMA FOOTBALL
By John Scott
$29.95 Hardcover 978-0-8061-7554-6
The University of Oklahoma and World War I
Edited by David W. Levy
Foreword by Joseph Harroz Jr.
Days before the armistice was signed ending World War I, Stratton D. Brooks, third president of the University of Oklahoma, sent a letter to every student, former student, and faculty member serving in the armed forces. He had a request: would each man write a letter in reply, describing his experiences and impressions during his wartime service? Dozens of them responded in late 1918 and early 1919. Now, more than a century later, historian David W. Levy has selected and annotated fifty-three of these letters. Sooner Doughboys Write Home is a richly detailed—and often poignant—record of what these young men thought about the war and what they witnessed firsthand.
As Levy explains in his thorough introduction, most of these young men, or “doughboys” as they were called, came from small Oklahoma towns and farms. Suddenly thrust into strange and often dangerous circumstances after the United States entered the war in 1917, they betray in their letters an appealing innocence of this wider world. For some of them, it is a world of dreary inactivity and boredom, punctuated by moments of breathtaking violence and danger. Others marvel at sights in Paris and in Germany. All the while, they keep a sharp eye out for their Sooner classmates from Norman, eager to share a quick drink or hurried chat. Although these Sooner doughboys, as Levy acknowledges, were not “ordinary,” given their privileged status as college students, they observed the war from the field and not from some more remote vantage point.
Drawing on his expertise as an American historian and his extensive knowledge of the university’s history, Levy identifies and explains in ample footnotes the numerous people and places mentioned by the letter writers. In so doing, he ties the experience of everyday Oklahomans to a global conflict that changed the course of history.
David W. Levy is retired as the Irene and Julian J. Rothbaum Professor of Modern American History and David Ross Boyd Professor of History at the University of Oklahoma. His many books include two volumes on the history of the University of Oklahoma.
By Constance E. Squires
On the morning of April 19, 1995, Delaney Travis steps into the Social Security office in Oklahoma City to obtain an ID for her new job. Moments later, an explosion shatters the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building into rubble. Her boyfriend Keith and half-sister Edie are left to assume the worst—that Delaney perished in the bombing, despite lack of definitive proof. Twenty years later, now married and bonded by the tragedy, Edie and Keith’s lives are upended when they begin to receive mysterious Facebook messages from someone claiming to be Delaney.
Desperate for closure, the couple embarks on separate journeys, each aiming for an artists’ community in New Mexico that may hold answers. Alongside their quest is August, a recovering alcoholic with a haunting connection to the bombing. Raised in the separatist compound of Elohim City, August harbors secrets about Timothy McVeigh, the perpetrator of the attack, and his own possible involvement in the tragedy. When his path crosses with Edie, he must choose whether to tell anyone about his past.
As the 20-year anniversary of the bombing approaches, fracking-induced earthquakes shake the ground of Oklahoma City, mirroring the unsettled lives of its residents. In their quest for answers, Edie, Keith, and August seek to understand how the shadows of the past continue to darken the present, as the ground beneath them threatens to give way once again.
In Low April Sun, acclaimed author Constance E. Squires has written the first novel to explore the enduring impact of the Oklahoma City bombing. While masterfully weaving a spellbinding mystery, Squires ultimately offers us a moving meditation on grief and forgiveness.
Constance E. Squires is the author of Live from Medicine Park, Along the Watchtower, which won the 2012 Oklahoma Book Award, and Hit Your Brights. Her short stories have been published in The Atlantic, Guernica, The Dublin Quarterly, Shenandoah, Identity Theory, The Rolling Stone 500, and other magazines. Squires teaches creative writing at the University of Central Oklahoma.
The first novel to depict the impact and aftermath of the Oklahoma City bombing
FEBRUARY
$26.95 HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-9474-5
262 PAGES, 6 X 9
FICTION/LITERATURE
HIT YOUR BRIGHTS
Stories
By Constance E. Squires
$19.95s Paperback 978-0-8061-6247-8
LIVE FROM MEDICINE PARK
By Constance E. Squires
$21.95s Paperback 978-0-8061-5733-7
MOST AMERICAN
Notes from a Wounded Place
By Rilla Askew
$19.95 Paperback 978-0-8061-5717-7
Proactive methods for preventing cheating and promoting learning
VOLUME 4 IN THE TEACHING, ENGAGING, AND THRIVING IN HIGHER ED SERIES
MARCH
$95.00x HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-9495-0
$24.95s PAPERBACK 978-0-8061-9496-7
280 PAGES, 6 X 9
3 TABLES
EDUCATION
Of Related Interest
A PEDAGOGY OF KINDNESS
By Catherine J. Denial
$95.00 x Hardcover 978-0-8061-9384-7
$24.95s Paperback 978-0-8061-9385-4
A TEACHER’S GUIDE TO LEARNING STUDENT NAMES
Why You Should, Why It’s Hard, How You Can
By Michelle D. Miller
$14.95s Paperback 978-0-8061-9466-0
THE PRESENT PROFESSOR Authenticity and Transformational Teaching
By Elizabeth A. Norell
$95.00x Hardcover 978-0-8061-9468-4
$24.95s Paperback 978-0-8061-9469-1
By Tricia Bertram Gallant and David A. Rettinger
In these days of an ever-expanding internet, generative AI, and term paper mills, students may find it too easy and tempting to cheat, and teachers may think they can’t keep up. What’s needed, and what Tricia Bertram Gallant and David A. Rettinger offer in this timely book, is a new approach—one that works with the realities of the twenty-first century, not just to protect academic integrity but also to maximize opportunities for students to learn.
The Opposite of Cheating presents a positive, forward-looking, research-backed vision for what classroom integrity can look like in the GenAI era, both in cyberspace and on campus. Accordingly, the book outlines workable measures teachers can use to better understand why students cheat and to prevent cheating while aiming to enhance learning and integrity.
Bertram Gallant and Rettinger provide practical suggestions to help faculty revise the conversation around integrity, refocus classes and students on learning, reconsider the structure and goals of assessment, and generally reframe our response to cheating. At the core of this strategy is a call for teachers, academic staff, institutional leaders, and administrators to rethink how we “show up” for students, and to reinforce and fully support quality teaching, learning, and assessment. With its evidentiary basis and its useful tips for instructors across disciplines, levels of experience, and modes of instruction, this book offers a much-needed chance to pause, rethink our purpose, and refocus on what matters—creating classes that center human interactions that foster the personal and professional growth of our students.
Tricia Bertram Gallant is Director of Academic Integrity and the Triton Testing Center at the University of California, San Diego. David A. Rettinger is Applied Professor and Undergraduate Program Director in Psychology at the University of Tulsa. Bertram Gallant and Rettinger coedited Cheating Academic Integrity: Lessons from 30 Years of Research.
Linking student experiences and identities to writing instruction
By Michele Eodice, Anne Ellen Geller, and Neal Lerner
It seems obvious: students will have more meaningful writing experiences if we offer more opportunities for their writing to be meaningful for them. But what does that mean? What makes writing meaningful for students? What, really, makes students want to write? The authors of this practical little book asked precisely that, and the answers they gathered from students across disciplines, majors, and institutions over several years inform their advice in Making
The critical lessons that Michele Eodice, Anne Ellen Geller, and Neal Lerner took from their survey research, as well as from their own classrooms and workshops, are these: Students want their writing to be consequential, to build on connections with their lives, their world, and their futures, and to foster an inclusive learning experience. The authors delved further into these findings by asking what role identities—whether racial, ethnic, or cultural— played in students’ approach to writing and by exploring what students found meaningful in writing during experiences such as disruption, dislocation, and loss; personal, economic, and health challenges; and political, racial, and societal conflict. The resulting guide pairs a wealth of new data with pedagogical strategies and reflective exercises to help instructors of all kinds connect more effectively with their students—and to help students connect their lives and their writing in meaningful and productive ways.
Meaningful writing makes for a richer, more successful learning experience, and this book invites students and teachers alike to take advantage of the guidance offered here to foster connections that will serve students—and the world—well beyond academia.
Michele Eodice is Professor Emeritus of Writing at the University of Oklahoma. Anne Ellen Geller is Professor of English at St. John’s University. Neal Lerner is Professor of English at Northeastern University.
APRIL
$95.00x HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-9533-9
$19.95s PAPERBACK 978-0-8061-9534-6
144 PAGES, 6 X 9 EDUCATION
A PEDAGOGY OF KINDNESS
By Catherine J. Denial
$95.00 x Hardcover 978-0-8061-9384-7
$24.95s Paperback978-0-8061-9385-4
A TEACHER’S GUIDE TO LEARNING
STUDENT NAMES
Why You Should, Why It’s Hard, How You Can
By Michelle D. Miller
$14.95s Paperback 978-0-8061-9466-0
THE PRESENT PROFESSOR
Authenticity and Transformational Teaching
By Elizabeth A. Norell
$95.00x Hardcover 978-0-8061-9468-4
$24.95s Paperback 978-0-8061-9469-1
Dick T. Morgan believed in a strong government empowered to do good things for the people.
DISTRIBUTED FOR TWO CITIES PRESS
JANUARY
$24.95 PAPERBACK 978-0-9847056-8-9
386 PAGES, 6 X 9
36 B&W ILLUS., 5 MAPS
BIOGRAPHY/HISTORY
Of Related Interest
AT WAR WITH CORRUPTION
A Biography of Bill Price, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Oklahoma
By Michael J. Hightower
$29.95 Hardcover 978-0-9847056-3-4
FORTY YEARS A LEGISLATOR
By Elmer Thomas
Edited by Carolyn G.
Hanneman
$24.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-3809-1
$19.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-9493-6
POLITICAL HELL-RAISER
The Life and Times of Senator Burton
K. Wheeler of Montana
By Marc C. Johnson
$34.95s Hardcover 978-0-8061-4085-8
$24.95 Paperback 978-0-8061-9486-8
By Michael J. Hightower Foreword by Bob L. Blackburn
Justice for All chronicles the career of Dick T. Morgan, an Oklahoma founding father whose public service reflects a passion for fairness that was sorely lacking in Gilded Age America. After arriving in the Unassigned Lands (later, central Oklahoma) with the first wave of non-Indian settlers on April 22, 1889, Morgan developed a reputation as the go-to lawyer for land disputes, built a substantial real estate business, and promoted church-building across Oklahoma Territory. During his tenure in Congress from 1909 until his death in 1920, he helped create institutions that were central to progressivism in the post-frontier period and have shaped modern America, including the Federal Reserve System, the Federal Trade Commission, and the Federal Farm Credit System.
Morgan’s adeptness in working across the aisle in a perpetually divided Congress serves as a wake-up call to politicians in thrall to ideology and identity politics at the expense of the public welfare. His speeches, publications, correspondence, newspaper interviews, and congressional testimonies reveal him as a public servant whose bedrock principles were rooted in the Republican Party—that is, the party of Lincoln. In both public and private life, Morgan demonstrated a deep allegiance to what one of his role models, President James A. Garfield, defined as the heart and soul of the nation and the basis of a free government: the church, the school, and the home.
Justice for All owes its existence to Dick T. Morgan’s great-grandsons, David and Kenyon Morgan, who resolved to rescue their ancestor from a century of undeserved obscurity. Traveling, literally and figuratively, in their greatgrandfather’s footsteps, the Morgan brothers combined their talents in a journey of discovery that helped this biographer illuminate the Progressive Era through the experiences of a native Hoosier who became one of his adopted state’s most beloved and influential citizens.
Also included is a 24" x 28" sectional map of Oklahoma Territory that Dick T. Morgan sold to homesteaders to help them file their claims.
Michael J. Hightower, a fourth-generation Oklahoman, earned his doctorate in Sociology and taught at the University of Virginia before launching his career as an independent historian and biographer. He lives in Oklahoma City and Charlottesville. Bob L. Blackburn is the former executive director of the Oklahoma Historical Society. He lives in Oklahoma City.
By Donald H. Ruggles and Mike McPhee
Pondbank is a masterful blend of Andrea Palladio’s architectural heritage and the timeless elegance of early 20th-century American homes in Florida. Crafted by a talented team of architects, interior designers, landscape architects, artists, and builders, this residence is designed for permanence—constructed from steel, stone, and plaster, it stands as a testament to durability while exuding a unique sense of historic charm and modern freshness.
Intended to be explored and appreciated from every angle, Pondbank reassures us that grace, style, and beauty continue to enrich our lives and push the boundaries of traditional architecture. The result is a spellbinding, romantic, and uplifting experience.
Curated by architect Donald H. Ruggles, designed by renowned artist John Boak, and written by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Mike McPhee, this largeformat book features 348 stunning color images across 192 pages. It tells the compelling story of how art and architecture can enhance our health and wellbeing. Focusing on the exceptional details that define Pondbank, the authors delve into the significance of creating such magnificent homes today. Grounded in neuroscience principles and adhering to LEED and sustainable criteria, Pondbank celebrates the fusion of historic ideas with contemporary science, resulting in a truly remarkable home for the modern era.
Donald H. Ruggles has been a practicing architect in Colorado for over fifty years. He currently serves as the Director of Classical Studies at the University of Colorado Denver College of Architecture & Planning. In addition to his architectural practice, Don is an author and movie producer. He is the Emeritus CEO of the award-winning Ruggles Mabe Studio, based in Denver. Mike McPhee is a Pulitzer Prize-winning writer and a long-time journalist for the Associated Press and the Denver Post. His work has appeared in prestigious publications such as The New York Times, The Washington Post, and the International Herald Tribune. He has also made appearances on major broadcasts, including Nightline, Today, Good Morning America, NPR, and CNN. He is a member of the Hall of Fame at the Denver Press Club and resides in Denver.
DISTRIBUTED FOR FIBONACCI LLC
MARCH
$80.00 HARDCOVER 979-8-218-46967-2
192 PAGES, 12 X 12
348 COLOR ILLUSTRATIONS
ARCHITECTURE
BEAUTY, NEUROSCIENCE, AND ARCHITECTURE
Timeless Patterns and Their Impact on Our Well-Being
By Donald H. Ruggles
$60.00 Hardcover 978-0-692-92862-2
BRUCE GOFF
Architecture of Discipline in Freedom By Arn Henderson
$45.00 x Hardcover 978-0-8061-5610-1
DISTRIBUTED FOR CLOUD CAMP PRESS
JANUARY
$35.00 HARDCOVER 978-0-9905502-9-7
184 PAGES, 6 X 9
7 COLOR ILLUS.
HISTORY/TRAVEL
RIVERS OF POWER
Creek Political Culture in the Native South, 1750–1815
By Steven Peach
$95.00 x Hardcover 978-0-8061-9326-7
$32.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-9327-4
NATIVE SOUTHERNERS
Indigenous History from Origins to Removal
By Gregory D. Smithers
$29.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-6228-7
SOUTHERN COUNTERPART TO LEWIS AND CLARK
The Freeman and Custis Expedition of 1806
By Thomas Freeman and
Peter
Custis
Edited by Dan Flores
$21.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-1941-0
By William P. A. Hunt
Now recognized as a global tourist destination featuring the Forbes Five-Star Sea Island Resort with world-renowned golf courses and fine dining, Georgia’s Golden Isles possess a complex history involving indigenous populations, colonial rivalries, and economic transformations stretching hundreds of years. During its evolution from territory contested by Spain, France, and Britain to a crucial part of the South’s cotton belt, the region has witnessed pivotal moments, including the American Revolution, the Civil War, and postbellum reconstruction. This work sets the stage for an exploration of the Golden Isles’ multifaceted past, highlighting their vital role in shaping the history of the United States.
Originally called “Golden Islands” by Scottish nobleman Robert Montgomery in the eighteenth century and geographically defined by the Altamaha and Ogeechee Rivers, the region comprises a series of islands, including Sea Island, St. Simons Island, Jekyll Island, Sapelo Island, and Cumberland Island. The area’s elevation above sea level, coupled with marshes and waterways, contributes to its distinctive ecology—and its salt marshes, covering over 350,000 acres, are a defining feature, creating a unique environment where ocean and river waters intermingle.
William P. A. Hunt is a recent graduate of Princeton University with a major in history and a minor in entrepreneurship business studies. Currently serving under the chief financial officer at the Anschutz Corporation in Denver, Hunt works in financial planning and analysis for various entities including Power Company Wyoming, Anschutz Exploration Company, and Anschutz Investment Company. He has previously worked extensively in various areas including Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG), the Los Angeles Kings, the Broadmoor Sea Island Company, and Xanterra Travel Collection.
By Christine K. Erickson
In the early 1920s, amid rising anti-Catholic sentiment and hysteria generated by World War I, the reconstituted Ku Klux Klan found new footing in many states outside the Deep South—including Montana. In Big Skies, White Hoods, Christine K. Erickson explores the little-known history of the Klan in Big Sky Country, revealing what this western incarnation had in common with its antecedents, how it differed from the Klan’s reappearance elsewhere, and what it might tell us about the resurgence of white nationalism in Montana and across the West.
The early-twentieth-century Klan, unlike its Reconstruction-era forbear, was a national phenomenon, with 3 to 4 million members across the country. But it was also highly localized—and in the forty-six Montana communities where it organized, that meant focusing less on race than on religion and class. Big Skies, White Hoods sets the historical stage for the Klan’s arrival with an account of the influence of the American Protective Association, a virulent anti-Catholic organization, and the social fallout from World War I, as seen in the emergence of the notorious Montana Council of Defense.
In its organizational structure and recruiting methods, its political interests and membership, and its deep connection to white Protestant culture, the Klan in Montana echoed iterations elsewhere. But Erickson shows how the state’s weather and geography complicated the task of organizing its scattered, isolated communities, and how local ambivalence challenged the high-minded extremist ideals of the Klan’s leaders—especially Grand Dragon Lewis Terwilliger, whose ambitions were finally thwarted when discrepancies between the national, state, and local organizations proved intransigent.
Although Big Skies, White Hoods documents the ultimate downfall of the Klan in Montana, the book’s epilogue confirms that its legacy of hate continues, as other racist organizations have written their white nationalist hopes upon Montana’s history.
Christine K. Erickson is Associate Professor Emerita of History at Purdue University Fort Wayne.
The first book about the Ku Klux Klan in 1920s Montana and its legacy
APRIL
$34.95x HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-9537-7
216 PAGES, 6 X 9
U.S. HISTORY/HISTORY
RACE AND THE WILD WEST
Sarah Bickford, the Montana Vigilantes, and the Tourism of Decline, 1870–1930
By Laura J. Arata
$24.95s Paperback 978-0-8061-6497-7
POLITICAL HELL-RAISER
The Life and Times of Senator Burton
K. Wheeler of Montana
By Marc C. Johnson
$34.95s Hardcover 978-0-8061-4085-8
$24.95 Paperback 978-0-8061-9486-8
"THEY ARE ALL RED OUT HERE"
Socialist Politics in the Pacific Northwest, 1895–1925
By Jeffrey A. Johnson
$34.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-3967-8
$24.95s Paperback 978-0-8061-9304-5
The untold history of when Montana horses dominated the racing establishment
APRIL
$34.95s HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-9531-5
312 PAGES, 6 X 9
20 B&W ILLUS. HISTORY/SPORTS
Of Related Interest
RODEO
An Animal History
By Susan Nance
$36.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-6502-8
$24.95s Paperback 978-0-8061-9013-6
HORSES THAT BUCK
The Story of Champion Bronc Rider Bill Smith
By Margot Kahn
$21.95 Paperback 978-0-8061-4847-2
XIT
A Story of Land, Cattle, and Capital in Texas and Montana
By Michael M. Miller
$29.95s Hardcover 978-0-8061-6716-9
$21.95 Paperback 978-0-8061-9201-7
By Catharine Melin-Moser
In Gilded-Age Montana, three former frontiersmen turned from speculation in minerals to speculation in Thoroughbred horses. The rest is horse racing history. . . or would be if the story had ever been written. When Montana Outraced the East retrieves the largely forgotten late nineteenth-century golden age of the Montana Thoroughbred industry, when Montana horses won some of the biggest prizes in American horse racing, confounding national sportswriters and threatening to reshape the balance of power within America’s oldest sport. This book introduces readers to larger-than-life characters like silver baron Noah Armstrong, pioneer banker Samuel Larabie, and “Copper King” Marcus Daly, each pursuing his passion for horses by studying pedigrees, importing blue-blooded stock, and turning them loose on native grasses under Montana’s big sky.
Where one observer saw “verist madness” in the enterprise, another sports journalist foresaw a not-too-distant day when Montana would “rival the worlds of old Yorkshire and the Blue-Grass region of Kentucky in the fame and celebrity of its racehorses.” And indeed, in due time the Montana horsemen were fielding equine stars like Spokane, winner of the 1889 Kentucky Derby; Scottish Chieftain, winner in the 1897 Belmont Stakes; and Ogden, the “Horse of Mystery” that rocked the eastern racing establishment by taking the 1896 Futurity at odds of 150 to 1. Catharine Melin-Moser recreates the thrilling era when, through the shrewd foresight, hustle, and luck that had made them millionaires, Montana entrepreneurs made a lasting mark on American horse racing. In telling their story, her book restores a significant and thoroughly captivating chapter to American Thoroughbred racing history.
Catharine Melin-Moser is a writer and independent historian. Her Western history articles have appeared in journals and magazines. She writes from her home in the Judith Mountains of central Montana.
By Michael Phillips and Betsy Friauf
Throughout the first half of the twentieth century, 32 states passed laws allowing involuntary sterilization on those deemed biologically “unfit”: convicted criminals, the disabled, the poor, and people of color. Texas, despite a history of violent racism, was not one of them. In The Purifying Knife, Michael Phillips and Betsy Friauf explore this curious instance of the Lone Star State’s exceptionalism. The first history of the eugenics movement in Texas, it is a narrative that intersects with debates over race, immigration, abortion, the role of women in society, homosexuality, medical ethics, and the politics of disability in the state—debates resonating today in Texas and beyond.
From the mid-nineteenth to the mid-twentieth centuries, Americans embraced eugenics. Yet the Texas legislature ultimately rejected nine of ten laws advocated by the state’s eugenicists and their predecessors. Phillips and Friauf trace this unlikely resistance to a variety of influences: wealthy cotton growers concerned that the anti-immigrant politics of the eugenics movement would deprive them of a source of easily exploitable labor; a populist distrust of higher education and the academic elites who enthusiastically supported the eugenics movement; and the forces of anti-Darwinist fundamentalism and pre-millennial dispensationalism in the 1920s, among others. The Purifying Knife also details how eugenical ideas survived long past their decline in the 1940s and have entered a disturbing afterlife in the late twentieth and early twentyfirst centuries.
A thoroughgoing look into a rare case where the eugenics movement “failed” in spite of its power in the United States and around the world—while still wielding a toxic influence—Phillips and Friauf’s work offers insight into the history of the LGBTQ community, abortion, and immigration policies in Texas, and persuasively argues that the long arc of eugenics history has helped shaped contemporary politics in the Lone Star State.
Michael Phillips teaches history at the University of North Texas and is author of White Metropolis: Race, Ethnicity, and Religion in Dallas, 1841–2001. Betsy Friauf is an independent scholar.
What the successes and failures of the eugenics movement reveal about Texas
JUNE
$36.95x HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-9536-0
296 PAGES, 6 X 9
13 B&W ILLUS.
U.S. HISTORY/HISTORY
RAZA SCHOOLS
The Fight for Latino Educational Autonomy in a West Texas Borderlands Town
By Jesús Jesse Esparza
$95.00 x Hardcover 978-0-8061-9271-0
$29.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-9272-7
YOU WILL NEVER BE ONE OF US
A Teacher, a Texas Town, and the Rural Roots of Radical Conservatism
By Timothy Paul Bowman
$32.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-9038-9
$24.95s Paperback 978-0-8061-9318-2
LONE STAR MIND
Reimagining Texas History
By Ty Cashion
$34.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-6152-5
$29.95s Paperback 978-0-8061-9478-3
How the Cherokee Nation defined belonging and citizenship over time
FEBRUARY
$45.00x HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-9475-2
270 PAGES, 6 X 9
6 B&W ILLUS., 4 TABLES
HISTORY/NATIVE AMERICAN
Of Related Interest
FORCED FEDERALISM
Contemporary Challenges to Indigenous Nationhood
By Jeff Corntassel and Richard C. Witmer II
$21.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-4191-6
LAST ONE WALKING
The Life of Cherokee Community Leader Charlie Soap
By Greg Shaw
$29.95s Hardcover 978-0-8061-9472-1
CLAIMING TRIBAL IDENTITY
The Five Tribes and the Politics of Federal Acknowledgment
By Mark Edwin Miller
$29.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-4378-1
By Aaron Kushner
For the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, citizenship is an active way of life. In this, Aaron Kushner contends, it differs from the general American understanding of citizenship as a statement. Cherokee Nation Citizenship is Kushner’s exploration of legal citizenship in the Cherokee Nation, how the law has developed and changed over time, and what lessons this living idea and its history hold for Americans, Native and non-Native alike. The first political history of Cherokee Nation citizenship laws, Kushner’s book challenges American presumptions about Indigenous politics and historical development, even as it encourages a rethinking of what citizenship is and does.
The Cherokee Nation’s understanding of citizenship is complex, encompassing legal entitlements and privileges but also notions of identity, belonging, and cultural practice. Kushner traces the evolution of this concept from 1710 to the birth of the Cherokee Republic with its first constitution in the early 1800s through the 2017 federal court decision that required the Cherokee Nation to extend full citizenship benefits to African American Freedmen. His account documents major shifts in the Cherokee Nation’s articulation of citizenship—changes introduced by the 1866 treaty that followed the Civil War, the allotment era of the late 1800s and early 1900s, and the Nation’s new constitution in the 1970s. The idea of Gadugi, which translates as “coordinated work for the common good,” is a foundational thread running through this history—an element that has helped the Cherokee Nation sustain itself, Kushner suggests, and that embodies a sense of responsibility and resilience that non-Native Americans can learn from.
Aaron Kushner is Teaching Assistant Professor in the School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership at Arizona State University. He is the coeditor of A Hero in All of Us? Heroism and American Political Thought as Seen on TV.
By Lucas P. Kelley
Since time immemorial, Native peoples’ understandings of space and territory have defined the landscape of the Tennessee Country—the region drained by the Tennessee, Cumberland, and Mississippi rivers and their tributaries. Marking Native Borders challenges the narrative of inevitable U.S. expansion by exploring how Cherokees and Chickasaws used these notions of space and territory in new and different ways to counter the encroachment of white settlers and land speculators in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
When settlers began to trudge over the Appalachian Mountains, intent on making new homes on Native land, Cherokees and Chickasaws fortified their territories by creating clear borders around their nations. They further defended their permanent, inherent right to these bordered spaces by combining Indigenous ideas of communal land use with aspects of European property law. The Cherokees and Chickasaws, however, did not always agree on how to maintain control of their lands, and Lucas P. Kelley’s comparison of their differing strategies provides a nuanced, more accurate picture of Native peoples’ lived experiences in this turbulent time and place. He also describes how white settlers and speculators, in turn, revised their own strategies for expansion in response to the Cherokees’ and Chickasaws’ success in defending their national lands.
The story of the early Tennessee Country is one of competing geographies, contested sovereignties, and disputed boundaries among Chickasaws, Cherokees, settlers, and land speculators. It is a history of conflict and contestation that influenced Native sovereignty and shaped the construction of an American empire. As this book suggests, it is an ongoing story, as Native peoples’ notions of space and territory continue to impact the Tennessee Country today.
Lucas P. Kelley is Assistant Professor of History at Valparaiso University.
How Native peoples defined, protected, and reimagined the borders of their lands
MAY
$45.00x HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-9541-4
248 PAGES, 6 X 9
10 B&W ILLUS., 2 MAPS
NATIVE AMERICAN/U.S. HISTORY
CHEROKEE POWER
Imperial and Indigenous Geopolitics in the Trans-Appalachian West, 1670–1774
By Kristofer Ray
$95.00 x Hardcover 978-0-8061-9296-3
$29.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-9297-0
RIVERS OF POWER
Creek Political Culture in the Native South, 1750–1815
By Steven Peach
$95.00 x Hardcover 978-0-8061-9326-7
$32.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-9327-4
NATIVE SOUTHERNERS
Indigenous History from Origins to Removal
By Gregory D. Smithers
$29.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-6228-7
The first introductory textbook for Osage, a significant and endangered language
APRIL
$65.00x HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-9529-2
$29.95x PAPERBACK 978-0-8061-9562-9
296 PAGES, 7 X 10 11 B&W ILLUS.
LANGUAGE/NATIVE AMERICAN
OSAGE DICTIONARY
By Carolyn Quintero
$55.00 x Hardcover 978-0-8061-3844-2
CHOCTAW LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
Chahta Anumpa, Volume 2
By Marcia Haag and Henry Willis
$26.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-3855-8
BEGINNING CREEK
Mvskoke Emponvkv
By Pamela Innes, Linda Alexander, and Bertha Tilkens
$34.95x Paperback & CD 978-0-8061-3583-0
By Cameron Pratt, Stephanie Rapp, Marcia Haag, and Dylan Herrick
The Osage language is a vital part of Osage identity. The language suffered rapid decline during the twentieth century, but the Osage people are taking significant steps to revitalize its use. To that end, this volume—the first ever introductory Osage grammar textbook—is a much-needed resource for students, teachers, scholars, and anyone wishing to learn how to speak and write Osage. Written collectively by bilingual Osage speakers and linguists, Osage Language and Lifeways offers both clear grammatical instruction and valuable cultural information.
As the authors explain in their introduction, the Osage language, a Dhegiha language within the Siouan language family, is highly complex. Drawing on their Native language expertise and classroom experience, the authors clarify elements of Osage grammar that are entirely different from English grammar or other European languages. Each chapter begins with a short dialogue or story written by Osage speakers. These passages present commonly used expressions and provide glimpses into Osage life experiences. The lessons are ordered in such a way that students can quickly learn how to pronounce Osage words, understand and make full sentences, and read and write the Osage alphabet.
Where possible, the authors limit the amount of difficult linguistic terminology and include numerous examples to illustrate their points. At the same time, this book is sufficiently descriptive for linguists seeking to study the language on a more technical level.
An important contribution to the study of indigenous languages, Osage Language and Lifeways opens a new pathway for Osages to learn and practice the language of their ancestors and ensure its continuity for future generations.
Cameron Pratt (Osage Nation) currently serves as language curriculum specialist and language teacher for Daposka Ankodapi, the Osage Nation school. Stephanie Rapp (Osage Nation) is an Osage language researcher and retired language teacher and curriculum specialist. Marcia Haag is Professor of Linguistics Emerita at the University of Oklahoma. She is the co-author of Choctaw Language and Culture: Chahta Anumpa, volumes 1 and 2. Dylan Herrick is Associate Professor of Linguistics at the University of Oklahoma and a specialist in the sound systems of lesser spoken languages.
How Indigenous Peyotists created the Native American Church to secure their religious freedom as Americans
By Lisa D. Barnett
Regarding peyote use among Native Americans, an ethnologist noted in 1891: “The ceremonial eating of the plant has become the great religious rite of all tribes of the southern plains.” But, as Lisa D. Barnett observes in Peyote Politics: The Making of the Native American Church, 1880–1937, Peyotism quickly came under scrutiny, with opponents, both non-Native and Native, seeking to prohibit the religious practice by transforming peyote into a narcotic, thereby drawing Indigenous people into the emerging racialized campaign against drugs. A history of the rise of Peyotism and the Native American Church from the 1880s to the 1930s, Barnett’s work details the ensuing struggle and its significance in reshaping Peyotists’ identity as “Native” and “American” and establishing their place in the American political and legal systems.
Barnett describes the strategies of resistance that Peyotists employed against opponents of their religious practice, including incorporating in 1918 as the Native American Church. In doing so, they secured their religious freedom but also formed a new, hybrid cultural sense of “Native American” that emphasized the reality of honoring both Native identity and American identity on the path to citizenship status.
Placing the story of Peyotism within the broader historical context of federal Indian policy and Progressive Era politics, Peyote Politics shows how, despite their minority status in the American religious landscape, Peyotists were determined to secure constitutional protections for their religion and its rituals. Through their tireless efforts to protect their religion within the legal and political system, these Native Americans, many of whom were not yet American citizens, proved to be the true proponents of the constitutional idea of religious freedom.
Lisa D. Barnett is Assistant Professor of American Religious History at Phillips Theological Seminary in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
MAY
$45.00x HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-9538-4
256 PAGES, 6 X 9
8 B&W ILLUS., 2 MAPS NATIVE AMERICAN/HISTORY/RELIGION
THE PEYOTE ROAD
Religious Freedom and the Native American Church
By Thomas C. Maroukis
$21.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-4109-1
$21.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-4323-1
A WHIRLWIND PASSED THROUGH OUR COUNTRY
Lakota Voices of the Ghost Dance
By Rani-Henrik Andersson
$39.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-6007-8
$29.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-6019-1
PEYOTE VS. THE STATE
Religious Freedom on Trial
By Garrett Epps
$21.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-4026-1
Indigenous peoples’ experience in the land that became the United States, distilled in a brief history
By Roger L. Nichols
This concise survey, tracing the experiences of Native Americans from their origins to the present, has proven its value to both students and general readers in the two decades since its first publication. This third edition, drawing on the most recent research, adds information about Indigenous social, economic, political, and cultural issues in the twenty-first century, including tribal sovereignty, the Keystone XL Pipeline, and the controversial legacy of Indian boarding schools.
MARCH
$29.95 PAPERBACK 978-0-8061-9528-5
304 PAGES, 6.14 X 9.21
14 B&W ILLUS., 4 MAPS NATIVE AMERICAN/U.S. HISTORY/HISTORY
Edited by Roger L. Nichols
$39.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-3856-5
A PROMISE KEPT
The Muscogee (Creek) Nation and McGirt v. Oklahoma
By Robert J. Miller and Robbie Ethridge
$65.00 x Hardcover 978-0-8061-9171-3
$24.95s Paperback 978-0-8061-9172-0
AMERICAN INDIAN TRIBAL GOVERNMENTS
By Sharon O'Brien
$29.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-2564-0
The author traces tribal experiences through four eras: indigenous America prior to the European invasions; the colonial period; the emergence of the United States as the dominant power in North America and its subsequent invasion of Indian lands; and the years from 1900 to the present. Useful features include brief biographies of important Native figures, an updated chronology, and suggested readings for each period of the past four hundred years. Nichols uses both Euro-American sources and tribal stories to illuminate the problems Indigenous people and their leaders have dealt with in every generation.
Roger L. Nichols is Emeritus Professor of History and Affiliate Professor of American Indian Studies at the University of Arizona. He is the author of Massacring Indians: From Horseshoe Bend to Wounded Knee, Warrior Nations: The United States and Indian Peoples, and coauthor of Tombstone, Deadwood, and Dodge City: Re-creating the Frontier West.
By Wesley Moody
As the commander of the US garrison at Fort Sumter in the fateful early hours of April 12, 1861, Robert Anderson (1805–1871) played a critical role in the unfolding of the Civil War. Although his leadership and his courage under fire catapulted him into national recognition, the attack on Fort Sumter was just one chapter in Anderson’s story. That story, told here in full for the first time, offers a unique lens on the development of the US military and the country itself before and during the Civil War.
Anderson’s family, harking back to the nation’s founding, included William Clark (of Lewis and Clark fame) and Chief Justice John Marshall. His father crossed the Delaware with George Washington. And among his acquaintances were presidents ranging from the aged John Adams to seven-year-old Theodore Roosevelt. Historian Wesley Moody charts Robert Anderson’s path from an upbringing on the Kentucky frontier to a West Point education and a military career that saw him fighting in nearly every American conflict from the Black Hawk War to the Civil War—catching malaria fighting the Seminoles, taking several bullets while serving in Mexico, writing the textbook for field artillery used by both Union and Confederate forces, mentoring William Tecumseh Sherman.
Central to Anderson’s story was his deft and decisive handling of the Fort Sumter crisis. Had Major Anderson been the aggressor, as many of his command urged, President Abraham Lincoln would have been unable to rally the Northern states to war. Had Anderson handed his command over to the Confederate troops, a demoralized North would have offered little resistance to secession. To understand this pivotal moment in US history, one has to understand the man at its center; and to understand that man and his masterful performance under extraordinary pressure, one can do no better than to read Moody’s thoroughly absorbing, richly detailed biography.
Wesley Moody is Professor of History at Florida State College at Jacksonville. He is the author or editor of several books on the Civil War, including Demon of the Lost Cause: Sherman and Civil War History.
The first biography of a key Union general
VOLUME 80 IN THE CAMPAIGNS AND COMMANDERS SERIES
MAY
$36.95s HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-9540-7
248 PAGES, 6 X 9
10 B&W ILLUS.
BIOGRAPHY/MILITARY HISTORY
ABOLITIONIST OF THE MOST DANGEROUS KIND
James Montgomery and His War on Slavery
By Todd Mildfelt and David D. Schafer
$45.00 x Hardcover 978-0-8061-9290-1
EMORY UPTON
Misunderstood Reformer
By David J. Fitzpatrick
$39.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-5720-7
POLITICIAN IN UNIFORM
General Lew Wallace and the Civil War
By Christopher R. Mortenson
$34.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-6195-2
$21.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-6736-7
A magisterial military history of the globe after the fall of the Berlin Wall
By Jonathan M. House
The collapse of the Soviet Union in 1989 freed the world of the political and military perils and imperatives of the Cold War. But it also introduced a whole new constellation of risks and challenges, as Jonathan M. House brings into sharp relief in A Military History of the New World Disorder, 1989–2022, the third and final volume in his comprehensive trilogy of military developments around the globe since the Second World War.
MAY
$55.00x HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-9535-3
392 PAGES, 6 X 9
21 MAPS
MILITARY HISTORY/WORLD HISTORY
A MILITARY HISTORY OF THE COLD WAR, 1962–1991
By Jonathan M. House
$50.00 x Hardcover 978-0-8061-6708-4
$29.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-8704-4
A MILITARY HISTORY OF THE COLD WAR, 1944–1962
By Jonathan M. House
$45.00 x Hardcover 978-0-8061-4262-3
$29.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-6875-3
SKI, CLIMB, FIGHT
The 10th Mountain Division and the Rise of Mountain Warfare
By Lance R. Blyth
$36.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-9465-3
What followed the breaking of the Cold War’s grip on global affairs was not so much a new world order as a new world disorder, as the United States and its allies suddenly found themselves without the sort of coherent grand strategy previously deployed to contain the Soviet Union. Focusing largely but not exclusively on the US, House surveys subsequent developments in military strategy and operations—the processes by which politicians and military leaders of the major powers designed, organized, resourced, and then employed military forces to conduct or deter conflicts. His overview ranges from conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan to American interventions in Panama, Somalia, former Yugoslavia, and Haiti; Israel vs. Hezbollah in Lebanon; and the resurgence of the Russian military in Syria, Georgia, and Ukraine. Throughout, House provides a compelling analysis of recent military developments, including the strengths and weaknesses of employing precision-guided munitions, counterinsurgency techniques, and other controversial methods of current warfare. His work reveals the complex relationship between national political decisions to commit armed forces to conflicts and the results on the battlefield—and offers a timely perspective on military power and practice in the current day.
Jonathan M. House is Professor Emeritus at the US Army Command and General Staff College, Leavenworth, Kansas. His many books include A Military History of the Cold War, 1944–1962 and A Military History of the Cold War, 1962–1991.
By Robert P. Wettemann Jr.
Coming of age during the Great Depression, the American boys who fought in World War II had, through necessity, developed a unique brand of technological resourcefulness. This proficiency, Robert P. Wettemann Jr. contends, provided GIs with another weapon in a distinctly American way of war. Rhino Tanks and Sticky Bombs is Wettemann’s eminently readable account of how this hardwon “use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without” mentality was critical to America’s success, giving servicemen the know-how and can-do spirit to creatively engineer solutions to wartime problems.
More than all the other soldiers in the conflict, American servicemen grew up in a society where the machine was ubiquitous—where enduring an unparalleled period of financial distress meant learning to keep their Model Ts, Fordson tractors, or other machinery operational. Wettemann describes how this tinkerer’s mentality promoted a technical aptitude and willingness to adapt unmatched by other armies fielded during World War II. At the same time, the US command structure demonstrated a willingness to evaluate, accept, and employ such efforts to improve both fighting capacity and the general comfort of US servicemen. Seamlessly blending social, military, intellectual, and technological history, Rhino Tanks and Sticky Bombs weaves an engaging narrative about the roots of American ingenuity during World War II—and makes a compelling case for a specific instance of American distinctiveness that proved crucial to Allied victory.
Robert P. Wettemann, Jr. is Associate Professor in the Department of History at the United States Air Force Academy.
How American resourcefulness and a flexible military culture aided fighting effectiveness
JUNE
$42.95x HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-9539-1
296 PAGES, 6 X 9
30 B&W ILLUS., 3 TABLES MILITARY HISTORY/U.S. HISTORY
SKI,
The 10th Mountain Division and the Rise of Mountain Warfare
By Lance R. Blyth
$36.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-9465-3
HOLLYWOOD'S IMPERIAL WARS
The Vietnam Generation and the American Myth of Heroic Continuity
By Armando José Prats
$45.00 x Hardcover 978-0-8061-9375-5
SPECIAL OPERATIONS IN WORLD WAR II
British and American Irregular Warfare
By Andrew L. Hargreaves
$36.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-4396-5
$29.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-9406-6
Linking military history and the rise of Anglo power along the border
MARCH
$45.00x HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-9530-8
224 PAGES, 6 X 9
3 B&W ILLUS., 5 MAPS, 2 TABLES MILITARY HISTORY/HISTORY
THE GARZA WAR IN SOUTH TEXAS
A Military History, 1890–1893
By Thomas Ty Smith
$29.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-9288-8
WAR AND PEACE ON THE RIO GRANDE FRONTIER, 1830–1880
By Miguel Ángel González-Quiroga
$50.00 x Hardcover 978-0-8061-6498-4
$26.95s Paperback 978-0-8061-9095-2
THE MEXICAN WAR CORRESPONDENCE OF RICHARD SMITH ELLIOTT
By Richard Smith Elliott
$32.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-2951-8
$24.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-9090-7
By Christopher N. Menking
The Mexican-American War, 1846–1848, resulted in the largest militaristic land acquisition in American history. It also, as Christopher Menking contends in this book, shaped the distribution of power and wealth in South Texas in profound ways that still resonate throughout the region’s political and economic landscape. The US Army Quartermaster Department oversaw the logistical war effort, which continued to operate a new chain of forts and depots along the southern and western boundary with territories controlled by Native Americans after the war ended. In Quartermasters of Conquest Menking explores the Quartermaster Department’s critical but generally unappreciated functions—its wartime support of three separate armies in the field and its long-term, consequential operations in the decade after the war.
In a detailed account of the Quartermaster Department’s methods, Menking describes how the Army imported Anglo labor to the area north of the Rio Grande, then sparsely populated by Tejanos and Mexicans. This Anglo influx, along with river transportation and supply contractors, ultimately altered the demographics of the region—and, Menking suggests, contributed to the growth of new Texas towns and cities, as satellite communities grew alongside the forts, dramatically shifting the urban geography and economic power across the Rio Grande. Combining analysis of wartime logistics with insight into the divergent military and social histories of the lower Rio Grande borderland, Quartermasters of Conquest demonstrates the lasting influence of the Quartermaster Department on South Texas during the mid-nineteenth century—and the wartime roots of Anglos’ political dominance despite being an ethnic minority in the region.
Christopher N. Menking is Professor of History at Tarrant County College, Southeast Campus.
NEW IN PAPERBACK
The Ernie Fields Territory Big Band By Carmen
Fields
The untold story of band leader Ernie Fields and his contributions to jazz and swing music
There was a time when countless young people in the Midwest, South, and Southwest went to dances and stage shows to hear a territory band play. Territory bands traveled from town to town, performing jazz and swing music, and Tulsa-based musician Ernie Fields (1904–97) led one of the best. In Going Back to T-Town, Ernie’s daughter, Carmen Fields, tells a story of success, disappointment, and perseverance extending from the early jazz era to the 1960s. This is an enlightening account of how this talented musician and businessman navigated the hurdles of racial segregation during the Jim Crow era. As much as possible, Carmen Fields tells her father’s story in his own voice: how he weathered the ups and downs of the music industry and maintained his optimism even while he faced entrenched racial prejudice and threats of violence. A devoted husband and family man, Ernie Fields also respected and appreciated his fellow musicians. The book includes a “Roll Call” of his organization’s members, based on notes he kept about them. Going Back to T-Town is a priceless source of information for historians of American popular music and African American history.
Carmen Fields is an Emmy Award–winning broadcast news journalist who currently produces and hosts the public affairs program Higher Ground on WHDH-TV, Boston. She co-anchored WGBH’s Ten O’Clock News from 1987 to 1991 and wrote the script for the American Experience documentary “Goin’ Back to T-Town” (1993).
JANUARY
$26.95 HARDCOVER978-0-8061-9184-3
$21.95 PAPERBACK 978-0-8061-9544-5
240 PAGES, 6 X 9
37 B&W ILLUS.
MUSIC/BIOGRAPHY
VOLUME 2 IN THE GREENWOOD CULTURAL CENTER SERIES IN AFRICAN DIASPORA HISTORY AND CULTURE
NEW IN PAPERBACK
The Chisholm Trail
Joseph McCoy's Great Gamble By James E. Sherow Foreword by James P. Ronda
An environmental history of the Texas cattle trade
★ 2019 Center for the Study of the American West Book Award for Outstanding Western Book
★ 2019 Hal K. Rothman Award Western History Association
★ 2019 Westerners Co-Founders Award Best Book (Finalist), Westerners International
★ 2018 Stubbendieck Great Plains Distinguished Book Prize (Finalist), Center for Great Plains Studies
One hundred fifty years ago the McCoy brothers of Springfield, Illinois, bet their fortunes on Abilene, Kansas, then just a slapdash way station. Instead of an endless horizon of prairie grasses, they saw a bustling outlet for hundreds of thousands of Texas Longhorns coming up the Chisholm Trail—and the youngest brother, Joseph, saw how a middleman could become wealthy in the process. This is the story of how that gamble paid off, transforming the cattle trade and, with it, the American landscape and diet. The Chisholm Trail follows McCoy’s vision and the effects of the Chisholm Trail from post–Civil War Texas and Kansas to the multimillion-dollar beef industry that remade the Great Plains, the American diet, and the national and international beef trade.
James E. Sherow is Professor of History at Kansas State University, Manhattan, and the author of numerous books and articles, including The Grasslands of the United States: An Environmental History and his award-winning Railroad Empire across the Heartland: Rephotographing Alexander Gardner’s Westward Journey. James P. Ronda is retired as H. G. Barnard Professor of Western American History at the University of Tulsa and is coauthor of The West the Railroads Made.
MARCH
$36.95x HARDCOVER978-0-8061-6053-5
$21.95 PAPERBACK 978-0-8061-9555-1
360 PAGES, 6.125 X 9.25
43 B&W ILLUS., 3 MAPS, 7 CHARTS, 5 TABLES
U.S. HISTORY/ENVIRONMENT/BIOGRAPHY
The Memoirs of William Henry Corbusier, 1844–1930
By William Henry Corbusier
Edited by Robert Wooster
Army surgeon, ethnographer, and writer William Henry Corbusier (1844–1930) witnessed the transformation of the United States from young republic to world power. In Soldier, Surgeon, Scholar, the retired army officer and surgeon recounts his experiences, which include a New York City childhood, adolescence in gold-rush California, and army life from the wilds of Arizona to the jungles of the occupied Philippines.
William Henry Corbusier was a career army officer and surgeon. Robert Wooster is the author of The Military and United States Indian Policy, 1865–1903 and The Civil War 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential People in the War between the States
FEBRUARY
$29.95x HARDCOVER978-0-8061-3549-6
$21.95x PAPERBACK 978-0-8061-9548-3
258 PAGES, 6 X 9
18 B&W ILLUS., 3 MAPS
BIOGRAPHY
Recollections of Her Army Life, 1869–1908
By Fanny Dunbar Corbusier
Edited by Patricia Y. Stallard
Born in Baltimore in 1838, Fanny Dunbar grew up in Louisiana to a family who survived the hardships of the Civil War. An intelligent, sensitive woman, Fanny experienced a radical life change when she met William Henry Corbusier, a Yankee officer and army surgeon. Her memoir recounts their subsequent forty-eight-year marriage. Corbusier’s life and her husband’s thirty-nine-year career in the army allow the reader to experience the period between the Civil War and World War I in totality. As the recollections of people whose lives played out against a world panorama, their memoirs provide a rare opportunity to examine events of frontier military life from both male and female perspectives.
Fanny Dunbar Corbusier was the career army wife of officer-surgeon William Henry Corbusier. Patricia Y. Stallard retired federal civil servant and education specialist with the United States Navy Recruiting Command.
FEBRUARY
$32.95x HARDCOVER978-0-8061-3531-1
$24.95x PAPERBACK 978-0-8061-9550-6
372 PAGES, 6 X 9
24 B&W ILLUS., 1 MAP
NEW IN PAPERBACK
Biographical sketches of the participants by scholars of the subjects and with introductions by the editor
Edited by LeRoy R. Hafen
Mountain men were the principal figures of the fur trade era, one of the most interesting, dramatic, and truly significant phases of the history of the American trans-Mississippi West during the first half of the 19th century. These men were of all types—some were fugitives from law and civilization, others were the best in rugged manhood; some were heroic, some brutal, most were adventurous, and many were picturesque. Included in Volume 4 are the biographies of George Bent; Robert Bent; George Drouillard; Moses "Black" Harris; James Ohio Pattie; Joshua Pilcher, Antoine Robidoux; John Rowland; Peter Sarpy; Thomas L. (Peg-leg) Smith.
LeRoy R. Hafen (1893–1985) was Professor of History at the University of Denver and Brigham Young University, Executive Director of the State Historical Society of Colorado, and author/editor of numerous books on the American West.
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South Pacific The Sound of Music Peter Pan As the star of these classic Broadway musicals, Mary Martin captivated theater audiences with her impish persona and magnificent voice. Now Ronald L. Davis fills a major gap in theater history, moving beyond Martin’s own 1976 memoir to provide a complete picture of her life and career. Lively and engaging, Davis’s biography is the first book-length portrait of the theater icon, spanning her lifetime to reveal facts about her childhood, marriages, and friendships—as well as artistic collaborations that included the likes of Rodgers and Hammerstein, Cole Porter, and Elia Kazan.
Ronald L. Davis was Professor of History at Southern Methodist University, where he was Director of both the Oral History Program on the Performing Arts and the De Golyer Institute for American Studies. He has written many books on the performing arts in America, including the best-seller Hollywood Anecdotes.
By Laurence M. Hauptman and L. Gordon McLester III
Chief Daniel Bread (1800-1873) played a key role in establishing the Oneida Indians’ presence in Wisconsin after their removal from New York, yet no monument commemorates his deeds as the community’s founder. Hauptman and McLester redress that historical oversight, connecting Bread’s life story with the history of the Oneida Nation. Bread was often criticized for his support of acculturation and missionary schools as well as for his working relationship with Indian agents; however, when the Federal-Menominee treaties slashed Oneida lands, he fought back, taking his people’s cause to Washington and confronting President Andrew Jackson.
Laurence M. Hauptman is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of History in the State University of New York, College at New Paltz. L. Gordon McLester III is an an enrolled member and formal Tribal Secretary of the Oneida Nation of Indians of Wisconsin and the founder of the Oneida Indian Historical Society.
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For years Robert Newton Baskin (1837–1918) may have been the most hated man in Utah. Yet his promotion of federal legislation against polygamy in the late 1800s and his work to bring the Mormon territory into a republican form of government were pivotal in Utah’s achievement of statehood. The results of his efforts also contributed to the acceptance of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by the American public. In this engaging biography—the first full-length analysis of the man— author John Gary Maxwell presents Baskin as the unsung father of modern Utah. As Maxwell shows, Baskin’s life was defined by conflict and paradox.
John Gary Maxwell is author of Gettysburg to Great Salt Lake: George R. Maxwell, Civil War Hero and Federal Marshal among the Mormons and Robert Newton Baskin and the Making of Modern Utah
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A
American Indians in U.S. History, Nichols, 18
B
Barnett, Peyote Politics, 17
Bertram Gallant/Rettinger, The Opposite of Cheating, 6
Big Skies, White Hoods, Erickson, 11
C
Cherokee Nation Citizenship, Kushner, 14
Chief Danniel Bread and the Oneida Nation of Indians of Wisconsin, Hauptman/McLester III, 25
Chisholm Trail, The , Sherow, 23
Corbusier, Soldier, Surgeon, Scholar, 24
D
Davis, Mary Martin, Broadway Legend, 25
E
Eodice/Geller/Lerner, Making Writing Meaningful, 7
Erickson, Big Skies, White Hoods, 11
F
Fanny Dunbar Corbusier, Corbusier/Stallard, 24
Fields, Going Back to T-Town, 23
G Going Back to T-Town, Fields, 23
H
Haag/Herrick, Osage Language and Lifeways, 16
Hafen, The Mountain Men and the Fur Trade of the Far West, Volume 4, 24
Hassrick/Peters/Speidel, Taos Society of Artists, 3
Hauptman/McLester III, Chief Daniel Bread and the Oneida Nation of Indians of Wisconsin, 25
Hero of Fort Sumter, Moody III, 19 Hightower, Justice for All, 8
House, A Military History of the New World Disorder, 1989–2022, 20 Hunt, Origins of the Georgia Coast , 10 J Justice for All, Hightower, 8 K
Kelley, Marking Native Borders, 15 Krehbiel, Tulsa, 2021, 1 Kushner, Cherokee Nation Citizenship, 14
L Levy, Sooner Doughboys Write Home , 4 Low April Sun, Squires, 5
M
Making Writing Meaningful, Eodice/Geller/Lerner, 7
Marking Native Borders, Kelley, 15
Mary Martin, Broadway Legend, Davis, 25 Maxwell, Robert Newton Baskin and the Making of Modern Utah, 25
Menking, Quartermasters of Conquest, 22 Military History of the New World Disaster, 1989–2022, A , House, 20 Moody III, Hero of Fort Sumter, 19 Moser, When Montana Outraced the East , 12 Mountain Men and the Fur Trade of the Far West , Volume 4, The , Hafen, 24
N
Nichols, American Indians in U.S. History, 18
Opposite of Cheating, The , Bertram Gallant/Rettinger, 6
Origins of the Georgia Coast , Hunt, 10 Osage Language and Lifeways, Haag/Herrick, 16
P
Peyote Politics, Barnett, 17 Phillips/Friauf, The Purifying Knife , 13 Pondbank, Ruggles/McPhee, 9 Purifying Knife , The , Phillips/Friauf, 13
QQuartermasters of Conquest, Menking, 22 R
Rhino Tanks and Sticky Bombs, Wettemann Jr., 21
Robert Newton Baskin and the Making of Modern Utah, Maxwell, 25 Ruggles/McPhee, Pondbank, 9 S
Sherow, The Chisholm Trail, 23 Soldier, Surgeon, Scholar, Corbusier, 24
Sooner Doughboys Write Home , Levy, 4 Squires, Low April Sun, 5 T
Taos Society of Artists, Hassrick/ Peters/Speidel, 3 Tulsa, 2021, Krehbiel, 1 W
Wetteman Jr., Rhino Tanks and Sticky Bombs, 21
When Montana Outraced the East, Moser, 12