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Will wrote: "I have ARC copies of The Arrow and the Setting Sun available for a review exchange. Here is the book description: They called him The Arrow: a man who chose to wound his own heart so that his peo..."
Hi Will! Your book sounds like a compelling and meaningful read. I especially like that it's told through Chipeta's perspective, and I'd be happy to support your launch and leave an honest review on Amazon after reading.
I'm also helping a publisher launch an upcoming business and AI book. If you're interested in supporting other authors' work as well, I'd be happy to send you our ARC sign-up form in the meantime. Once it's completed, we'll send the ARC copy as soon as it's ready for distribution.
Looking forward to hearing from you!

They called him The Arrow: a man who chose to wound his own heart so that his people might survive.
Chief Ouray of the Tabeguache Ute was a leader unlike any other. Brilliant, multilingual, and possessed of a quiet authority that commanded respect from warriors and diplomats alike, he navigated the impossible terrain between two worlds as white expansion swept across Colorado. While younger men sharpened their weapons, Ouray sharpened his words, believing that war against the United States meant annihilation for the Núuchi-u people.
But diplomacy exacted its own devastating toll. Each treaty signed carved away more of the homeland he loved. Each concession earned him the contempt of those he fought to protect. Branded an appeaser by his own warriors, betrayed by every promise Washington made, Ouray carried the crushing weight of a man who sacrificed everything, his pride, his reputation, his very spirit, for a peace that was never honored.
Told through the eyes of Chipeta, his wife and most trusted advisor, The Arrow and the Setting Sun follows Ouray's extraordinary journey from the mountains of Colorado to the halls of Washington and finally to a barren Utah reservation where his light faded but never truly died.
Selected among the top fifteen Biographical Historic Fiction titles in the 2026 Historical Fictions Society's First Chapters Competition, this is the story of a visionary who saw the future clearly, fought it with every breath, and broke himself against its relentless tide so that his people might endure.
A powerful entry among literary western novels and essential reading for readers of Louise Erdrich, this is an unforgettable story of love, resilience, and the native American struggle to maintain their way of life and their dignity.