The newly revised second edition of this concise, engaging, and unorthodox history of America’s West has been updated to incorporate new research, including recent scholarship on Native American lives and cultures. An ideal text for course work, it presents the West as both frontier and region, examining the clashing of different cultures and ethnic groups that occurred in the western territories from the first Columbian contacts between Native Americans and Europeans up to the end of the twentieth century.
This book covers everything from Columbus’s first voyages to spaghetti westerns, and does so with great detail and aplomb. This could have very easily been a dry academic tome, and while it is dense, it’s also narratively compelling.
I learned a ton about the ever-changing relationship between settlers, including the Spanish, French, and Americans, and the First Nations peoples. I learned a ton about so much else, and so can you, if you read this excellent book. My only negative is I feel it doesn’t spend enough time on the era most associated with the “Old West” (1865-1890), but it makes up for that by being excellent elsewhere.
After yet another quote from a Native American, after a long section that was nothing but the multi-thousand word account of a battle from a Native American with no attempt at balancing history or intellectual honesty, the author noted that Karl Marx couldn't have said it better himself. This then is the middle of this book. Marx spun out through every minority voice that the authors could find. What the authors couldn't find they invented. More myth than truth and a book steeped to the gills with negativeity. The book starts out as if it will be an interesting history of The West but becomes the studies of the oppressed minority a few chapters in. The West loses all grandeur and becomes merely the grinding down of everything good and noble. Speaking of minority opinion, mine clearly is just such an opinion. If you want to know how the west was lost. This is the book for you. For me, it was a rare DNF as reading about the proletariat for the thousandth time was just too much. Imagine a book about the building of the Empire State Building or the Eiffel Tower that documented every case of worker unrest and every beam or girder made of shoddy steel, but failed to actually explain the grandeur of the building.
A really fantastic history book - brilliant merging of political, cultural, environmental, regional, economic, history across several hundred years and a huge area in sophisticated and fascinating ways!
A cornucopia of information. Did a great job of illuminating how the western part of the US was discovered, settled and grown. Very interesting. One detraction was the last chapter which didn’t pull everything together at the end.
Pretty decent current look at the history of the West. My one criticism is that if you read chapter 7 til the end of the book while simultaneously reading Limerick's Legacy of Conquest, there are a lot of the same stories and a few of the same pictures. However, they are both very good books with emphasis on the conquest state of mind and people who have traditionally been silenced in history books.
I would recommend this to anyone interested in the American West.
As a westerner myself this was a startling revelation of how brutal my glorified family history actually was. America is just as bloody and brutal as any empire that came before. Shocked, disgusted, and a little disheartened.
Okay, so I didn't technically read all of this book. I read parts here and there to finish my assignments. It seemed well-written and a good rendering of the history of the American West.
I read this book for the Indiana Academoc Super Bowl competition and really enjoyed it. It was an easy read and entertaining. I really learned a lot about American history from this book.