South Dakota Books
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Time marches on...Review Date: 2005-08-04

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Fantastic piece of work!Review Date: 2003-10-24

Always drawn to the heat, the light, the energy...Review Date: 2008-07-09
A truly inspiring read.

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Authentic account of prairie lifeReview Date: 2005-11-08

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The simple, shaded color illustrations add a visual touch to this geological tale.Review Date: 2007-12-04
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New History is Called Gift to South DakotaReview Date: 2005-11-19
--Reviewed in South Dakota Magazine (Nov/Dec 2005)

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An Uplifting and Inspirational ReadReview Date: 2000-07-14
From the start it is clear the journey isn't an easy one. Klippenstein begins by touching upon her personal experience of suffering through the Farm Crisis of the 1980s and of losing the South Dakota ranch she and her husband, Marc, had owned: "Not the kind of lost where you set the car keys on top of the refrigerator and find them two months later during a house-cleaning binge. More like the lost as in lost youth. You had it once. Used it. Enjoyed it. And then you were stripped of youthful exuberance and creamy soft skin."
Ironically, this losing-it-all experience supplies Klippenstein with the grit and gumption to go after her dream of becoming a writer. The book takes the reader on the ups and downs of learning the ropes of the publishing business. It is a journey where hope quickly blossoms, then almost as suddenly is dashed; where self-pity and self-doubt ride an emotional roller coaster with pride and confidence.
Torn between wanting to become a voice for the American rancher, yet admitting that she resisted becoming "emotionally involved with ranching again," Klippenstein writes, "I grew up in Pittsburgh. My Mayflower ancestors were seamen and merchants, inventors and scholars. I was devastated as we slowly lost the ranch and had to ship our cattle to market. I lost my dream. The dream betrayed me. The land and cattle betrayed me. My background didn't hold me to the land the way it held Marc. What I saw as risks, Marc saw as challenges."
Be it risk or challenge, opportunity or struggle, hope or angst, ranching or writing, A Path of Colored Leaves speaks very intimately to all of these yet leaves the reader feeling renewed and refreshed, ready to take on any personal dream abandoned - an especially helpful book for the novice writer to have at hand.


A different sort of prairie RepublicanReview Date: 2005-09-27
This publication on Senator Norbeck has been virtually unobtainable which is why I tracked the author down after reading his excellent 1952 book 'Mount Rushmore' - still the best on the politics and history of the great memorial and fortunately still available via Amazon's used book service.
Norbeck was a most unusual Republican, supporting state enterprises, but one who suited the times and Fite shows how he successfully prevented the Nonpartisan League enjoying the same success in South Dakota that they had enjoyed in North Dakota by capturing their political ground.
While attacking them as radical socialists and disloyal to the Great War effort, the then state governor denied he was a socialist and that entrance by the state into certain lines of business was not socialism, particularly when it prevented exorbitant profits being made by monopolists. Shades of Teddy Roosevelt.
Whether it was progressivism or socialism Norbeck certainly promoted things like rural credit programs, a state coal mine and cement plant (the latter lasting for three-quarters of a century) while his sponsorship of good roads, railways free text book schemes, assistance to war veterans, grain-marketing acts are all detailed.
Given all this it is perhaps not surprising that Norbeck was one of the few GOP survivors in the era of FDR and the New Deal. Fite describes vividly the tensions in Republican ranks in SD between the prairie populist and conservatives in the leadup to the 1932 watershed election that obviously pointed to the end of Republican rule, under the impact of the Great Depression.
After an easy primary win Norbeck was returned for a third term when he beat his Democratic rival by 26,000 votes, despite the fact that in the presidential contest FDR carried the state by 84,000 votes. By the 1936 election the ailing SD Republican senator was positively endorsing FDR against GOP challenger Alf Landon!
Like the earlier Roosevelt (TR), Norbeck was also a great conservationist and as Fite points out Mt Rusmore, Custer State Park, the Badlands National Park, the Migratory Bird Act are all testimonials to his efforts as both a state and federal legislator. Norbeck's wish, "I would rather be remembered as an artist than as US senator," would certainly earn favour with all those, (including this Australian reviewer), who have travelled along the aesthetically pleasing Needles Highway in the Black Hills,as part of the Peter Norbeck Scenic Byway, artistic proof of his insistence for the road to blend in with the environment rather than disturb the beauty of this wonderful area.
Norbeck's capacity to understand the importance of harmonising roads and tourism with the environment has helped make the Mount Rushmore and Black Hills area such an enduring attraction.
As an agricultural historian and a native of South Dakota, Professor Fite, is clearly at home with his subject and his works have continually survived the test of time. The re-publication of this fine biography is long overdue and hopefully it will be well received by American readers and, like his 'Mount Rushmore,' is well worth reading by anyone with a passion for western or Great Plains history.
On a personal note I wish the author, now in Florida, a long and healthy retirement and thank him for his contribution to making South Dakotan and American history such a pleasurable experience to the reader.


"Picturing The Past" is so well done that it could readily serve as a template for similar photographic studies Review Date: 2007-07-07

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A Piece of Pardise : A Story of Custer State ParkReview Date: 2002-05-03
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