Oklahoma Books
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Unblinkingly honest portrayal of important historyReview Date: 2007-03-14
An essential coverage.Review Date: 2006-11-07
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch
Collectible price: $28.95

Joshua PilcherReview Date: 2006-02-08
Joshua Pilcher was a hard-luck figure of the fur-trade period. A visionary who saw himself and others like him as important explorers of the unknown West, a tireless businessman in the fur trade for a number of years, and an Indian agent at the end of his life, it seems that most of his endeavors ended up in failure, or at best, partial success. In 1819 he became a partner with Manuel Lisa in the formation of the Missouri Fur Company and took over the company a year later when Lisa died. After an unsuccessful journey up the Missouri to the Yellowstone in 1821, he joined Col. Henry Leavenworth in his attack against the Arikaras in 1823, an expedition that produced mixed results. The Missouri Fur Company failed two years later (Pilcher blamed Blackfoot attacks on his trappers as the cause). He formed another company and led an expedition to Fort Vancouver; nothing came of this, either, except the report he wrote about his venture, which praised the Oregon territory as a good place for settlement and the South Pass (later Oregon Trail) as an easy way to get there.
A failure financially in the fur business, Pilcher next became an Indian agent on the upper Missouri for a number of years before replacing William Clark as superintendent of Indian affairs in St. Louis. He died there in 1843. A diligent and serious man, working for the government in an office in St. Louis was probably not the way Pilcher envisioned his life as a younger man, but it's where unfortunate circumstances led him. John Sunder's biography is sympathetic toward Pilcher's plight. It's a scholarly and straightforward account of his life, interestingly told. Sunder is a fine writer, and this is an excellent biography.
Deserving biography of an exceptional manReview Date: 2001-12-19
Used price: $59.98

Great HistoryReview Date: 2007-11-15
Biography of an Indian TribeReview Date: 2005-11-17
The Kickapoos survived much better than most Indian tribes. Perhaps that is attributable to their social conservatism, warlike character, and contrary nature. They do not seem to have exerted themselves at fostering positive interpersonal relationships and endearing themselves to other tribes or Whites. A Texan, comparing them to the ferocious Comanches and Apaches, said the Kickapoos were "the worst of the lot" and the most vicious, calculating, and enterprising of Indians. The Mexican Kickapoos were described as the "meanest, least civilized, and most worthless" of all the Indians. Coming from Whites, those are impressive endorsements. The prickly Kickapoos didn't get pushed around much by anyone.
Macho Indians with guns and feathers are more interesting than downtrodden, doormat Indians and the Kickapoos fill the role perfectly. The author probably overestimates their historical prominence compared to other tribes such as the Shawnee, but he's compiled a fascinating history that brings the history of the tribe up to about 1910. This is an old book and readers may find it a bit politically incorrect. It's well worth a read, however, especially for the odd tale of how forest dwelling Indians from the north woods of Wisconsin came to live in the deserts of northern Mexico.
Smallchief
Collectible price: $125.00

denhardtReview Date: 2007-12-12
Definitely a book for the Quarter Horse fan!Review Date: 1999-11-29

Used price: $3.24

A valuable bookReview Date: 2002-06-06
Most of her entries were written from a Christian's perspective and how she tried to share gospel with the Kiowas and in fact, many became Christians because of her. Crawford also with the help of the Kiowas built a church at Saddle Mountain, Oklahoma. Unlike some missionaries who preached to save the "savages", Crawford truly respected their cultural identity and in fact sought a middle ground, where cultural exchange took place. She told them that becoming a Christian would not change their identities.
This book is valuable because it contains speeches, conversations and testimonies given by the Kiowas which can help to increase our understanding of both their culture and the complexity of their relationship with missionaries.
The Missionary TrailReview Date: 2000-10-06
Collectible price: $80.00

One of the best American painters Review Date: 2005-07-07
Tiger seems an overdue candidate for iconhood. He was a full-blooded Indian from Oklahoma. He was uneducated, never finishing high school, and untrained, although he studied for a while at the Cooper Art School in Cleveland. He was a boxer and street fighter, a drinker, and, most importantly, he died young. He was only 26 when he killed himself with a bullet -- apparently accidental -- to the head. He was enormously, instinctively talented at his trade and blissfully ignorant. He once asked, "Who was Michelangelo?"
His wife and cousin compiled this illustrated biography. It's well written, favorable to Tiger but not hagiographic. The story of his life is interesting; the reproductions of his paintings and drawings are wonderful. There is a drawing of James Dean done when Tiger was about 14 years old that is as good a representation of the "rebel without a cause" as I have seen. There are photographs of Tiger in the boxing ring, and riding a horse, and with his daughter. He was a handsome young man whose pompadour resembles James Dean's.
Most of all there are reproductions of his paintings, more than 100 of them, most dominated by the beautiful blue he favored and featuring American Indians in all their activities. The impact of his large paintings cannot be appreciated on the printed page but they are stunning. Tiger's output was enormous; he had a photographic memory and rarely erased. He once drew a locomotive in all its details from memory. He was a budding genius who, in my humble opinion, deserves to be in the first rank of American painters -- not in the first rank of American Indian painters, but in the first rank of American painters. And the movie of his life will undoubtedly win an Oscar.
Smallchief
The Life and Art of Jerome TigerReview Date: 2000-07-13

Used price: $9.99
Collectible price: $30.00

general overview of Ancient Egyptian lifeReview Date: 2000-08-25
Fascinating!Review Date: 2000-02-29
Collectible price: $15.00

Light on the mountainReview Date: 2008-07-15
Her tombstone is there now, with the inscription as follows:
ISABEL CRAWFORD 1864--1961
I WILL DWELL AMONG MINE OWN PEOPLE.
Her story is very inspiring and I wish it would be made into a movie!
Wonderful true storyReview Date: 2001-11-06

Used price: $4.75

"Lily's White Lace" vows to lastReview Date: 2002-08-28
Lily's White LaceReview Date: 2002-08-28

Collectible price: $32.00

I Loved the Book, If Not Henke!Review Date: 2008-08-30
A great accomplishment at bringing a clear picture of the German U-boat wars.Review Date: 2007-02-10
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