The main purpose for this annotated bibliography is
support of "The North American Plains" and other college courses on
the Great Plains of North America that I teach. It also will be consulted, I
suspect, by a variety of users other than my students. The publication data
in the third column includes the original edition as a baseline. Also
commonly listed is some other, recent edition commonly available.
Occasionally listed is some intermediate edition of particular note. In the
fourth column are my own annotations. In the fifth column are links to
resources on the book or author on the World Wide Web, including any known
on-line edition of the text. In the far-right column, for benefit of my
students at NDSU, I add notes on where the books here listed are locally
available: SU = NDSU Libraries, TC = Tri College,
and TI = my personal library.
Author
|
Title
|
Publication
|
Notes
|
Links
|
W
|
|
Adams, Andy
|
Log of a Cowboy: A Narrative of Old Trail Days
|
Boston:
Houghton Mifflin, 1903
Reprint, Lincoln: U. of Nebraska Press, 1964
|
The classic work on cattle-trailing, depicting a
composite cattle drive from the Rio Grande
to Montana.
|
Handbook of Texas:
Adams,
Andy
|
TC
|
|
Adams, Howard
|
Prison of Grass: Canada from the Native Point of
View
|
Toronto:
General Publishing, 1975
|
Adams, a Metís, views settlement as colonialism. He
seeks to "unmask both the white-supremacist and the white-liberal view
that the natives were warring savages without any government, who craved
white civilization." A Metís history from Metís activist perspective.
|
Native American Authors profile: Howard Adams
|
|
|
Adelman, Jeremy
|
Frontier Development: Land, Labor, and Capital on the
Wheatlands of Argentina
and Canada,
1890-1914
|
New York: Oxford U. Press, 1994
|
|
|
|
|
Allen, John L.
|
Passage Through the Garden: Lewis and Clark and the Image of the American Northwest
|
Urbana: U. of Illinois
Press, 1975
|
|
|
SU
|
|
Ambrose, Stephen E.
|
Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas
Jefferson, and the Opening of the American West
|
New York:
Simon & Schuster, 1996
|
A good, readable history of the Lewis & Clark
expedition, in the context of a biography of Lewis.
|
|
SU
|
|
Andreas, Carol
|
Meatpackers and Beef Barons: Company Town in a Global
Economy
|
Niwot: U. Press of Colorado, 1994
|
|
|
|
|
Archer, John H.
|
Saskatchewan:
A History
|
Saskatoon:
Western Producer Prairie Books, 1980
|
The standard history of the province.
|
|
|
|
Artibise, Alan F.J.
|
Winnipeg:
A Social History of Urban Growth, 1874-1914
|
Montreal:
McGill-Queen's U. Press, 1975
|
By western Canada's premier urban
historian. Develops concepts of a "commercial elite" and a
"growth ethic" manipulating the development of the city.
Discusses ethnic problems in urban growth, also class divisions.
|
|
SU
|
|
Baker, T. Lindsay
|
A Field Guide to American Windmills
|
Norman: U. of Oklahoma
Press, 1984
|
A marvelously exhaustive history and guidebook to
windmills, which are one of the great symbols of technological adaptation
on the plains.
|
|
SU
|
|
Baker, T. Lindsay and Billy R. Harrison
|
Adobe Walls: The History and Archeology of the 1874
Trading Post
|
College Station:
Texas A & M U. Press, 1986
|
|
|
TC
|
|
Barbour, Barton H.
|
Fort Union and the Upper Missouri
Fur Trade
|
Norman: U. of Oklahoma
Press, 2001
|
A comprehensive and competent history of this citadel of
the American Fur Company. The author defends the company against its
harsher critics, who have scored the fur traders for bespoiling the western
environment and native cultures.
|
|
|
|
Bement, Leland C.
|
Bison Hunting at Cooper Site: Where Lightning Bolts
Drew Thundering Herds
|
Norman: U. of Oklahoma
Press, 1999
|
Description of a Folsom bison hunt site in northwestern
Oklahoma, including the discovery of the famous lightning bolt skull--a Bison
antiquus skull with a red zigzag mark on it.
|
|
|
|
Bennett, John W.
|
Hutterian Brethren: The Agricultural Economy and
Social Organization of a Communal People
|
Stanford: Stanford
U. Press, 1967
|
A study of six Hutterian colonies in southwestern Saskatchewan, with a
comparison to Israeli communes. An "ecological" study by an
anthropologist. Studies relation of social and economic behavior to natural
environment, in what he calls "dynamic adaptation."
|
|
SU
|
|
Bennett, John W.
|
Northern Plainsmen: Adaptive Strategy and Agrarian
Life
|
Chicago:
Aldine Pub. Co., 1969
4th Ed., Arlington Heights:
AHM Publishing Company, 1976
|
Studies Indians, ranchers, farmers, and Hutterites, each
of whom found a "niche" on the plains. Explicitly cites W.P. Webb
as inspiration for his work, which he calls here "cultural
ecology." Study area is Saskatchewan,
in fictional locality of "Jaspar."
|
|
SU
|
|
Bennett, John W. and Seena B. Kohl
|
Settling the Canadian-American West, 1890-1915:
Pioneer Adaptation and Community
Building
|
Lincoln: U. of Nebraska Press, 1995
|
A study of settlement on the Saskatchewan-Montana border
that relies heavily on local histories, using them to explore the common
mythology of frontier community formation.
|
|
SU
|
|
Benson, Jackson J.
|
Wallace Stegner: His Life and Work
|
New York:
Penguin, 1996
|
This is the standard biography of Stegner, and a
serviceable one, but its treatment of Stegner's Saskatchewan roots is the weakest part
of the book.
|
|
TC
|
|
Berlo, Janet Catherine
|
Spirit Beings and Sun Dancers: Black Hawk’s Vision of
the Lakota World
|
New York:
Braziller, 2000
|
Outstanding study of ledger art that takes the work seriously
as art, not just ethnography.
|
Plains Indian
Ledger Art
|
SU
|
|
Berthrong, Donald J.
|
The Cheyenne and
Arapaho Ordeal: Reservation and Agency Life in the Indian
Territory, 1875-1907
|
Norman: U. of Oklahoma
Press, 1976
|
The confinement of the Cheyenne
and Arapaho on a reservation in Oklahoma,
attempts to acculturate the Indians (including attempts to make them into
farmers or stockmen), conflicts with traditional culture, and eventual
allotment of the reservation.
|
|
SU
|
|
Berthrong, Donald J.
|
The Southern Cheyennes
|
Norman: U. of Oklahoma
Press, 1963
|
The old standard history of this central plains nation.
|
|
|
|
Bicha, Karel Denis
|
The American Farmer and the Canadian West, 1896-1914
|
Lawrence: Coronado Press, 1968
|
History of the emigration of American farmers of the
"western Middle West" to Saskatchewan and Alberta, with reference
both to American conditions provoking emigration and to Canadian efforts to
attract immigration.
|
|
SU
|
|
Biolsi, Thomas
|
Organizing the Lakota: The Political Economy of the
New Deal on the Pine Ridge and Rosebud Reservations
|
Tucson: U. of Arizona
Press, 1992
|
|
|
TC
|
|
Bissinger, H.G.
|
Friday Night Lights: A Town, a Team, and a Dream
|
Reading:
Addison-Wesley Pub. Co., 1990
|
The story of a high-school football season, that of the
Permian Panthers (Odessa,
Texas), 1988--and the social
context thereof. Besides exploring the place of school sport in Odessa, the book
treats such other important developments as race relations and
boom-and-bust in the oil industry.
|
|
TC
|
|
Blaine, Martha Royce
|
Pawnee Passage, 1870-1875
|
Norman: U. of Oklahoma
Press, 1990
|
|
|
|
|
Blasingame, Ike
|
Dakota Cowboy: My Life in the Old Days
|
New York:
Putnam, 1958
Reprint, Lincoln: U. of Nebraska Press, 1985
|
|
|
SU
|
|
Blodgett, Jan
|
Land
of Bright Promise: Advertising the
Texas
Panhandle and South Plains, 1870-1917
|
Austin: U. of Texas
Press, 1988
|
A study of land-company promotion of regional
settlement.
|
|
|
|
Bolton, Herbert E.
|
Coronado on the
Turquoise Trail: Knight of the Pueblos
and Plains
|
Albuquerque: U. of New Mexico Press, 1949
|
Biography of Coronado, best-known Spanish explorer of the
plains, by the historian who founded the school of borderlands
historiography.
|
|
|
|
Bonnifield, Paul
|
The Dust Bowl: Men, Dirt, and Depression
|
Albuquerque: U. of New Mexico Press, 1979
|
One of several good secondary books on the Dust Bowl. Notable
for its regional, anti-government perspective.
|
|
SU
|
|
Bowman, Isaiah
|
The Pioneer Fringe
|
New York:
American Geographical Society, Special Publication No. 13, 1931
|
Work derives from an intercontinental geographic study
of "the pioneer fringe," or frontier of settlement, in various
countries. Includes sections on the American and Canadian plains. A good
work for comparative context as of its time of publication.
|
|
SU
|
|
Brackman, Barbara, and Cathy Dwigans, Eds.
|
Backyard Visionaries: Grassroots Art in the Midwest
|
Lawrence: U. Press of Kansas, 1999
|
S.P. Dinsmoor (the Garden of Eden, Lucas) and other
eccentric outsider artists are treated in this anthology assembled by the
Kansas Grassroots Art Association.
|
|
SU
|
|
Breen, David H.
|
The Canadian Prairie West and the Ranching Frontier,
1874-1924
|
Toronto: U. of Toronto Press, 1983
|
A solid history of ranching in the Canadian west, which
was not just a matter of American intrusion, but a development of British and
eastern Canadian enterprise. Details leasing system, society of ranching,
coming of homesteaders, hard winter of 1907, and "dark years" of
1905-1911.
|
|
SU
|
|
Brown, Dee
|
Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee:
An Indian History of the American West
|
New York:
Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1970
|
A landmark book in the reinterpretation of the so-called
Indian wars of the plains, taking a view wholly sympathetic to the Indians.
Unfortunately, it also consigned Plains Indians to victim status; it would
be the next generation of histories that would restore agency to them.
|
|
SU
|
|
Bucko, Raymond A.
|
The Lakota Ritual of the Sweat Lodge: History and
Contemporary Practice
|
Lincoln: U. of Nebraska Press, 1998
|
An anthropologcal study that includes historical texts
describing the ritual of the inipi and traces it to present in
Lakota culture.
|
|
TC
|
|
Burnet, Jean
|
Next-Year Country: A Study of Rural Social
Organization in Alberta
|
Toronto: U. of Toronto Press, 1951
|
A sociologist's study of the Hanna vicinity in eastern Alberta, where
failure to adapt by Anglo-Canadian and German-Russian cultures produced
failure to create stable society. Excellent analysis of social structure of
town and country. Vol. 3 of Social Credit in Alberta Series.
|
|
|
|
Butler,
William Francis
|
The Great Lone Land: A Narrative of Travel and
Adventure in the North-west of America
|
London:
S. Low, Marston, Low & Searle, 1875. Reprint, Edmonton: M.G. Hurtig, 1968
|
Narrative of a British army officer who came west to
suppress the Red River Rebellion, was commissioned by the Canadian
government to report on Indian affairs and governmental needs in the west,
and explored the plains and Rockies. Wrote
other adventure books of exploits in other parts of British
empire, but this is the best.
|
|
SU
|
|
Capote, Truman
|
In Cold Blood: A True Account of a Multiple Murder
and Its Consequences
|
New York:
Random House, 1965
|
A "nonfiction novel" (so the author termed it)
about the Clutter family murders in Holcomb,
Kansas, in 1959.
|
|
SU
|
|
Carlson, Paul H.
|
The Plains Indians
|
College Station:
Texas A & M U. Press, 1998
|
A sound, concise treatment of Plains Indian culture,
focusing on Plains culture traditionally defined, following European
contact.
|
|
TC
|
|
Carr, Joe, and Alan Munde
|
Prairie Nights to Neon Lights: The Story of Country
Music in West Texas
|
Lubbock:
Texas Tech U. Press, 1995
|
|
|
|
|
Carrels, Peter
|
Uphill Against Water: The Great Dakota Water War
|
Lincoln: U. of Nebraska Press, 1999
|
Well-researched history, by a writer from Aberdeen, of the grassroots opposition to the Oahe
Diversion in South Dakota.
|
|
SU
|
|
Carriker, Robert C.
|
Father Peter John De Smet: Jesuit in the West
|
Norman: U. of Oklahoma
Press, 1995
|
A sound biography treating a religious figure who
cultivated a close and cordial relationship with the Indians of the
northern plains.
|
|
|
|
Carter, John E.
|
Solomon D. Butcher: Photographing the American Dream
|
Lincoln: U. of Nebraska Press, 1985
|
Butcher is the most illustrious photographer of the
homesteading era on the plains; the book offers a splendid selection of
images, along with biographical background.
|
|
SU
|
|
Carter, Sarah
|
Prairie Harvests: Prairie Indian Reserve Farmers and
Government Policy
|
Montreal:
McGill-Queen's U. Press, 1990.
|
|
|
|
|
Cather, Willa
|
My Antonia
|
Boston:
Houghton Mifflin, 1918. Scholarly Edition, Lincoln:
University of
Nebraska Press, 1994
|
The best-loved novel by the greatest novelist ever to
hail from the plains.
|
|
SU
|
|
Chalfant, William Y.
|
Cheyennes and
Horse Soldiers: The 1857 Expedition and the Battle of Solomon's Fork
|
Norman: U. of Oklahoma
Press, 1989
|
An authoritative work on the Sumner expedition and on
the fight on the Solomon, in western Kansas.
|
|
TC
|
|
Chalfant, William Y.
|
Dangerous Passage: The Santa Fe
Trail and the Mexican War
|
Norman: U.
of Oklahoma Press,
1994
|
|
|
SU
|
|
Chalfant, William Y.
|
Without Quarter: The Wichita Expedition and the Fight on
Crooked Creek
|
Norman: U. of Oklahoma
Press, 1991
|
|
|
SU
|
|
Chiel, Arthur A.
|
The Jews in Manitoba:
A Social History
|
Toronto: U. of Toronto Press, 1961
|
One of the few good studies of Jews in the plains
region. Part of a series on ethnic groups sponsored by Manitoba Historical
Society and the provincial government.
|
|
|
|
Cleveland,
Ceil
|
Whatever Happened to Jacy Farrow?
|
Denton: U. of North Texas
Press, 1997
|
This is the autobiography of the woman who was the
prototype for Jacy Farrow in Larry McMurtry's The Last Picture Show.
That gives it a certain literary interest, but it also has distinct
documentary value—as a narrative of a young woman growing up in the Last
Picture Show generation, and more to the point, as a |