This is a scholarly, well-researched, well-sourced, highly documented history of the indigenous inhabitants of the northwestern part of the Olympic Peninsula and Puget Sound covering the time period from the late 1700s-1970s, focusing primarily on those inhabitants now known as the Makah Nation. An adaptation of Reid's PhD thesis, it draws on written documents of white travelers to the area and indigenous oral histories, and is dense with facts, examples, transcriptions of names and terms into the local languages, and detailed geographies that explain how the indigenous people of the Salish Sea navigated these waters.
At several points in the first half of the book, I laughed out loud. The indigenous people of the northwest had some good times vexing the earliest travelers to Puget Sound, all of whom were looking for the fabled Northwest Passage.
But the book becomes more serious as the colonists begin to outnumber the natives and begin to oppress the original inhabitants of the area, stealing their traditional lands, plundering the seas in the Makah's traditional fishing areas, and basically trashing the marine ecosystem despite the Makah telling them, "Yeah, don't do that. Umm... that's never going to work out here. Umm... if you keep doing that everything will die off. Can you please stop doing that?"
Reading example after example of how the white people screwed over the Makah should be mandatory for everyone wanting to run for political office.
I greatly appreciate the campground run by the Makah Nation, which allows people to visit the majestic land they inhabit. I purchased this book at the gift store at the museum, which is a great accompaniment to this book.
P.S. The USG should compensate the Makah for the schooners seized and destroyed in the 1920s.