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Bound With These Titles
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Summary
Summary
After the Civil War and Reconstruction, a new struggle raged in the Northern Rockies. In the summer of 1877, General Oliver Otis Howard, a champion of African American civil rights, ruthlessly pursued hundreds of Nez Perce families who resisted moving onto a reservation. Standing in his way was Chief Joseph, a young leader who never stopped advocating for Native American sovereignty and equal rights. Thunder in the Mountains is the spellbinding story of two legendary figures and their epic clash of ideas about the meaning of freedom and the role of government in American life.
Author Notes
Daniel J. Sharfstein is a professor of law and history at Vanderbilt University and a 2013 Guggenheim Fellow. His first book, The Invisible Line: A Secret History of Race in America, received the J. Anthony Lukas Prize. He lives in Nashville.
Reviews (5)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Revealing all the strengths and weaknesses of popular history, Sharfstein (The Invisible Line), professor of law and history at Vanderbilt University, relates the oft-told tale of Native American bravery and misguided American policy during the Nez Perce War of 1877 through the lives and exploits of two great tragic figures. Sharfstein writes with great skill and due regard for the sad, human elements of the U.S. effort to hem in and defeat a defiant people whose great leader remains an example of moral courage and bearing. No other book better brings to the fore the qualities of Chief Joseph or better explores the dilemma of his pursuer, Gen. O.O. Howard, a major personage of Reconstruction whom Joseph frustrated at every turn. Moreover, Sharfstein dug deeper into the sources than any predecessor and unearthed new dimensions of this particular history. This is in many ways a splendid book. But it's also a bloated one, filled with irrelevant details-the speed of a train, what people packed to travel-and yet inexcusably lacking any maps. It's also just a story, and no matter how well told it is, it reveals nothing of the place of the Nez Perce War in the larger scheme of American colonizers' efforts to suppress native independence. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
*Starred Review* The story of the Nez Perce leader known by whites as Chief Joseph has been told many times before. Usually, Joseph and his band are viewed as tragic heroes as they resisted efforts to force them from their beloved homeland in northwestern Oregon and then defied the U. S. Army in a heroic but failed effort to escape to Canada. History professor Sharfstein reinforces Joseph's stature as a figure of courage, dignity, and moral rectitude. But he also shows Joseph in a more nuanced light as the leader strives to negotiate with the U.S. government while navigating the tricky waters of intratribal politics. What makes Sharftstein's account unusual is the equal focus he places upon army officer Howard, who became both an admirer and nemesis of Joseph. After a stellar Civil War career, during which he had lost an arm, Howard sustained a series of professional setbacks. His initial success as head of the Freedmen's Bureau was derailed by unfair charges of corruption and waning enthusiasm for aiding former slaves. As head of the army's Department of the Columbia, he had the unenviable task of forcing Native Americans onto reservations. When Joseph and his band bolted, Howard had to lead and coordinate the pursuit. Sharfstein has provided a scrupulously researched and detailed revisiting of one of the most moving and saddest sagas in American history.--Freeman, Jay Copyright 2017 Booklist
New York Review of Books Review
TWO VERY GOOD and very different new books reflect the extraordinary range of military history being written these days. In the unusual THE ALLURE OF BATTLE: A History of How Wars Have Been Won and Lost (Oxford University, $34.95), Cathal J. Nolan seeks to demolish how historians view war - and succeeds surprisingly well. The traditional Western view of conflict is that the way to win a war is to seek battle and prevail. This is the approach embodied by Napoleon, made doctrine by Clausewitz and captured on film in "Patton." And it is entirely wrong, Nolan, a history professor at Boston University, says, as he conducts the literary equivalent of scorched earth warfare. Nolan's primary argument is that focusing military history on battles is the wrong way to understand wars because what wins conflicts is almost always attrition, not battle. Generally, one side, usually the one with a smaller economy and population, becomes exhausted, and gives up. Talk about élan and audacity all you like, he counsels, but what wins wars is demography and economic strength. In fact, he says, the ideal of a "decisive battle" waged by great leaders should be seen as a pernicious myth that takes weaker, fascistic powers into wars against nations they know they cannot defeat in the long run. Two leading examples of this "short war" delusion are, of course, Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan. Hence Germany's blitzkrieg campaigns early in World War II and Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. Inside this very good fat book is an excellent thin book trying to get out. That's more a criticism of the Oxford University Press than of the author, because what this book needed was an editor with a strong hand. At 670 pages, it is just too damn long. It contains sections that wax encyclopedic without any evident connection to the book's core themes. For example, we are subjected to seemingly everything Nolan knows about the Crimean War, like the fact that the efforts of Florence Nightingale, the pioneer of modern nursing, were at first rebuffed by some British officers. We get a deep dive into the Franco-Prussian War, but oddly almost nothing on the American Civil War that preceded it. Asia goes unmentioned before the 20th century. The chapter titles are opaque, more like symbolic poetry than guideposts for the book. On the other hand, a book has to be really thoughtprovoking to have so many problems and still be so fascinating. I cannot remember reading anything in the last few years that has made me reconsider so many basic questions - What wins wars? What is the most illuminating way to relate military history? Most important, is our own military too focused on battles and insufficiently attentive to what is required to win wars? In other words, are our generals flailing because they try to substitute battlefield skill for strategic understanding? (I think they are.) Ultimately, Nolan is persuasive that too much attention has been paid to battles. Even for that great genius of warfare, Napoleon, he argues - credibly - that the slow bleed of guerrilla war in Spain did much more than any battle to bring about his defeat. By the time of Waterloo, he insists, France was a spent force. And if Napoleon hadn't been finished off there, he would have been at his next battle, or the one after that. So much for perhaps the most famously decisive battle in history. THUNDER IN THE MOUNTAINS: Chief Joseph, Oliver Otis Howard, and the Nez Perce War (Norton, $29.95) is almost the opposite kind of history book. In this far more traditional work, Daniel J. Sharfstein, a Vanderbilt University law and history professor, offers a brisk narrative of one of the last major collisions between Native Americans and white America. His two main characters are complex and compelling - Chief Joseph, a thoughtful, powerful speaker who spent years trying to find a way for his people to live alongside American settlers, and General O. O. Howard, a moralistic liberal Army general whose fate it was to crush Joseph's small Nez Percé tribe. In the summer of 1877 it became clear that Joseph's peaceable dream of coexistence was not possible. Deciding they would have no more to do with the whites, the Nez Percé set off on a trek from their homeland, which lay in the area where Oregon, Idaho and Washington meet. They eventually turned north, crossing at one point through the Yellowstone National Park, which had been established five years earlier. Howard's soldiers, pursuing the tribe, enjoyed that park, Sharfstein notes, catching trout in the mountain rivers and poaching them in its geysers. The tribe's thousand-mile retreat ended not far from the Canadian border, where it was finally surrounded by Army forces. Joseph famously stated there, "From where the sun now stands I will fight no more." Less well known is the speech he gave in Washington, D.C., a few years later: "If the white man wants to live in peace with the Indian, he can live in peace. There need be no trouble. Treat all men alike. Give them all the same law. Give them all an even chance to live and grow.... Let me be a free man... and I will obey every law, or submit to the penalty." Despite its stuffy academic title, AMERICAN SANCTUARY: Mutiny, Martyrdom, and National Identity in the Age of Revolution (Pantheon, $30) tells a similarly dramatic tale - in this case, a good, readable story in the mode of Nathaniel Philbrick's nautical histories. It has to do with a 1797 mutiny aboard the British warship Hermione that was far more violent than the better known one that occurred on the Bounty eight years earlier. And because some of the mutineers were Americans who had been impressed into British service, and some were turned over to the British Navy by American authorities, it became the Benghazi incident of its time. Federalists tended to see the mutineers as bloodstained murderers, while Jeffersonian Republicans viewed them as men held involuntarily who had a right to seek their liberty. The debate had a significant effect on the election of 1800, turning the vote away from John Adams and toward Thomas Jefferson, the ultimate victor. The book occasionally falters. The author, A. Roger Ekirch, a historian at Virginia Tech, seems to have a better feel for American political history than for command at sea. For example, a deep sea generally is an advantage for a ship, not a hazard. Similarly, marine officers were more likely to be resented aboard a ship than others, because the marines were effectively naval police, enforcing shipboard discipline. And the second half of the book occasionally bogs down in multiple quotations from newspapers of the time. Still, the level of detail, including verbatim testimony from subsequent courts-martial, is impressive. Amore puzzling work is LINCOLN'S LIEUTENANTS: The High Command of the Army of the Potomac (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $38), by the Civil War stalwart Stephen Sears. It is a fine book, enjoyable to read. All the greatest hits are here - the spectacular feuds between Union generals, the preening of Gen. George McClellan, the pervasive tendency to underestimate President Lincoln's strategic insight and the tragedy of the battle in the Petersburg Crater. Yet all this has been well told before. The mystery is why it has to be told once more, especially in a volume of almost 900 pages. This is not an argument that historians should stop writing about the Civil War. But when they do, they should offer new information or a fresh perspective. I found neither here. it is disquieting to turn from these books about the early United States to one about our own century's war in Afghanistan only to find some of the same flaws from the past, like the attempt to impose capitalist liberal democracy on people long accustomed to very different ways. Aaron B. O'Connell, the editor of our latest longest war: Losing Hearts and Minds in Afghanistan (University of Chicago, $30), calls that country "the worst possible testing ground for a Western democratic experiment conducted at the point of a gun." The other contributors to the volume - almost all military veterans of the Afghan war - generally agree that the American people are culturally unable to win wars like this one. "Prudence was blinded by unexamined political and cultural assumptions, and the result was a massive and avoidable waste of time, lives and resources," Aaron MacLean concludes; he led a Marine infantry platoon there and also holds a master's degree from Oxford in medieval Arabic studies. MacLean tellingly observes that the Americans were not trying to bring governance to a place that had none, but rather were trying to replace an existing unwritten constitution they didn't understand and indeed barely perceived. "It consisted of traditional ethnic, tribal, state and religious patterns, all of which had been partially transformed by modernization and traumatically stressed by decades of war and the rise of Islamic radicalism," he writes. Surprisingly, no good overview of our Afghan war has been published yet. Until that happens, this enlightening volume is probably the best introduction to what went wrong there, and why. THERE IS A common thread to almost all wars: They begin with hubris, stumble on miscalculation and end in sorrow. So it was, emphatically, with the Athenian empire's invasion of distant Sicily in 415 B.C., during the Peloponnesian War. As a result of that poorly considered action, Athens eventually suffered political upheaval. "War abroad had given rise to civil discord at home," Jennifer T. Roberts writes in THE PLAGUE OF WAR: Athens, Sparta, and the Struggle for Ancient Greece (Oxford University, $34.95). Reading that, I began to wonder if there was a parallel to the unnecessary American invasion of distant Iraq in 2003, and the election of Donald Trump to the presidency some 13 years later. Roberts, a classicist at the City University of New York, notes that as a result of its political turmoil, Athens found its democracy temporarily overthrown by an oligarchical "motley crew with differing goals." Do we really need another history of the Peloponnesian War? That was the question in my mind when I opened this book. When I finished it, I thought, yes, we seem to. Military historians often neglect developments in the arts, for instance, but Roberts weaves in Greek culture, showing how works by dramatists and philosophers reflected events in the war. Aristophanes' "Lysistrata," about women going on a sex strike to bring peace, was produced in 411 B.C., in the wake of the Athenian disaster in Sicily. She portrays the death of Socrates 12 years later as one more evil consequence of the war, with the great philosopher scapegoated "for the ills of a city that had suffered war, economic collapse, demographic devastation and civil strife." A less examined aspect of ancient history is the Praetorian Guard of the Roman emperors. Guy de la Bédoyère, a prolific British historian, tackles the subject in praetorian: The Rise and Fall of Rome's Imperial Bodyguard (Yale University, $35). This is not an enjoyable book to read, but it is an interesting one, as the author pulls together the scraps and threads of information about the Guard. The problem is that so little is known about it that the story never really comes alive. The Harvard historian David Armitage offers another unsettling echo from ancient history when he notes that the Latin phrase variously translated as "public enemy" or "enemy of the people" - the second used by President Trump to describe the American news media - was first devised by Romans in the context of their civil wars, as a way to justify violence against fellow citizens. But overall, his short CIVIL WARS: A History in Ideas (Knopf, $27.95) offers more dry analysis than juicy insights or rich narrative. Storytelling and details are not lacking in at the edge of THE WORLD: The Heroic Century of the French Foreign Legion (Bloomsbury, $30). One of its themes is how routine suicide was in the Legion. Out of 845 Legionnaires sent on an expedition to Madagascar, 11 were officially declared to have taken their own lives. The author, Jean-Vincent Blanchard of Swarthmore College, says that number is almost certainly an undercount, with other self-killings recorded as deaths by disease. Among its interesting details: Near a major Legionnaire base in Morocco, there was a huge government-run prostitution complex, protected by a police checkpoint and populated by 600 to 900 women. Members of the Legion were not allowed to venture more than seven kilometers from their headquarters in Algeria, or to buy drink stronger than wine. The rightist, monarchist, religiously conservative strain in French thought represented by the Legion continues today, of course. Marine Le Pen, the far-right French politician who was recently defeated for the presidency, is the daughter of Jean-Marie Le Pen, who served in the Legion in Vietnam and Algeria in the 1950s. AMERICANS ALSO TEND to forget what we as a people once knew. One of the oddities of World War I was that for most of its duration, from August 1914 until April 1917, American reporters were from a neutral country, and so able to cover the fighting from both sides. At the outset, Chris Dubbs reports in American journalists in the great war: Rewriting the Rules of Reporting (University of Nebraska, $34.95), the most welcoming country, surprisingly, was Germany, which wanted to present its side of the story to the American public. Britain was less open to having its operations covered, and the French were the strictest censors of all. The Allies arrested reporters while the Germans offered them tours of the front. Among the consequences, Dubbs, himself a journalist turned military historian, notes, was that when the British public finally learned about the horrible nature of trench warfare, it was all the more shocked. If Dubbs's book is about how journalists covered World War I, Ray Moseley's reporting war: how Foreign Correspondents Risked Capture, Torture and Death to Cover World War II (Yale University, $32.50) is about how the second global war affected the reporters who covered it. Today, too many people have come to think of World War II as the "good war." One of Moseley's themes is that there is no such thing. A veteran foreign correspondent, he quotes a British journalist after a German victory in the Sahara: "I found myself hating the desert with a neurotic, tormenting hatred. I was obsessed with the waste of tears and blood and sweat that... I found I could no longer even write about it." "Reporting War" makes for melancholy reading. Among the most famous of American war correspondents was Ernie Pyle. Another journalist covering the fighting, The New Yorker's A. J. Liebling, astutely observed that part of Pyle's success came from his treating the war not as an adventure or crusade but rather as "an unalleviated misfortune." After the liberation of Paris, Pyle himself wrote, "For me war has become a flat, black depression without highlights, a revulsion of the mind and an exhaustion of the spirit." Pyle died during the landings on Okinawa in April 1945. Such ends were not unusual; Moseley cites one estimate that correspondents suffered a higher casualty rate during the war than combat troops did. After the war, some of those who survived went on to fame, like Walter Cronkite and Eric Sevareid. But many others expired prematurely of alcoholism, depression, midlife heart attacks and car accidents. One of the lessons of all these books is that wars always look worse closer up. Indeed, one of the tests of the veracity of a history of a conflict is whether it is depressing. If it is not, something may be wrong. The ideal of a decisive battle waged by great leaders may in fact be nothing more them a pernicious myth. THOMAS E. RICKS is the author, most recently, of "Churchill and Orwell: The Fight for Freedom." His column appears twice a year.
Kirkus Review
A chronicle of the white conquest of the inland Northwest at the expense of native peoples defeated in a war that even the newcomers recognized to be unjust.Oliver Otis Howard enjoyed mixed successbut mostly failure, it seemsas an officer in the Army. At Gettysburg, his command suffered such heavy losses that he was summarily replaced by a junior officer, which, recounts Sharfstein (Law and History/Vanderbilt Univ.; The Invisible Line: Three American Families and the Secret Journey from Black to White, 2011), left him "mortified." A leading agent of Reconstruction, Howard failed to avert Jim Crow. He was unwanted during the Spanish-American War, but he haunted the military camps as a kind of evangelical candy striper. In between, he commanded a badly conducted campaign against the Nez Perce Indians of the Northwest, led by a man named Chief Joseph, who, though not a war chief, had plenty of experience tangling with white invaders. Sharfstein looks at that well-studied campaign in light of those framing events, seeing westward expansion and the Indian Wars as a continuation of the nation's growing militarism, which closed off the century with war against Spain. The author contrasts Howard, a sometimes-competent, often self-doubtful man, with one of his junior officers, who went from fighting the Nez Perce in a savage waras Sharfstein writes, "there was nothing abstract about the dead," scalped, mutilated, and blackened in the hot sunto becoming a fierce critic of American imperialism. Even there, notes the author, the oppositional argument was tainted with social Darwinist ideas, warning against "the dangers of absorbing an Asiatic population of mixed blood,' millions of yellow, naked mongrels' and coolie laborers." Mixed with exciting set piecesbattles, treaty negotiations, oratory over whose rightful land it wasand bolstered by impressive archival research, Sharfstein's story unfolds as a swift-moving narrative of tragic inevitability. A superb, densely detailed complement to William Vollmann's poetic/fictional treatment The Dying Grass (2015), of compelling interest to any student of 19th-century American history. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Library Journal Review
Sharfstein (law, history, Vanderbilt Univ.; The Invisible Line) examines the causes and consequences of the Nez Perce War of 1877, using the intertwined stories of Gen. Oliver O. Howard (1830-1909) and Chief Joseph (1840-1904) to frame this thoroughly researched work. The author places this confrontation between Native peoples and white settlers within the context of broader events of the 19th century. Howard, a tireless champion of freed slaves, was tasked with convincing the Nez Perce to move onto reservations assigned to them by a series of treaties. When tensions flared, Joseph and Howard attempted to resolve the conflict, first peacefully and eventually through war. Sharfstein provides considerable detail about skilled and heroic Nez Perce fighters and families, who bested Howard's larger forces at many turns before their final defeat. The story is filled with considerable irony, as men seeking a peaceful resolution were drawn into deadly conflict. Among the many extraordinary stories here is that of C.E.S. Wood, whose participation in this war eventually led him to a life devoted to helping the disadvantaged. VERDICT Highly recommended for general readers as well as those interested in the history of Native peoples. [See Prepub Alert, 10/17/16.]-Charles K. Piehl, Minnesota State Univ., Mankato © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Table of Contents
Author's Note | p. xiii |
Overview Maps | p. xviii |
Prologue: The Dreamers | p. 1 |
Part I | |
Chapter 1 A Willing Exile | p. 17 |
Chapter 2 New Beginnings | p. 45 |
Chapter 3 Quite Good Friends | p. 66 |
Chapter 4 Winding Waters | p. 79 |
Chapter 5 The Wilderness of American Power | p. 93 |
Chapter 6 Adonis in Blue | p. 115 |
Chapter 7 Wind Blowing | p. 136 |
Chapter 8 A Sharp-Sighted Heart | p. 150 |
Part II | |
Chapter 9 Aloft | p. 179 |
Chapter 10 Split Rocks | p. 201 |
Chapter 11 Fait Accompli | p. 221 |
Chapter 12 A Perfect Panic | p. 233 |
Chapter 13 Death in Ghastly Forms | p. 247 |
Chapter 14 Bullets Singing Like Bees | p. 264 |
Chapter 15 Heart of the Monster | p. 282 |
Chapter 16 Lightning All Around | p. 306 |
Chapter 17 Fury | p. 323 |
Chapter 18 A World of Our Own | p. 345 |
Chapter 19 Through the Veil | p. 365 |
Chapter 20 Where the Sun Now Stands | p. 382 |
Part III | |
Chapter 21 The Best Indian | p. 405 |
Chapter 22 Red Moon | p. 427 |
Chapter 23 A Glorious Era | p. 447 |
Chapter 24 Swing Low | p. 467 |
Epilogue: Acts of Remembering | p. 484 |
Battle Maps | p. 499 |
Acknowledgments | p. 503 |
Notes | p. 509 |
Illustration Credits | p. 593 |
Index | p. 595 |