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Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee
by Dale Brown


  
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Book Description

History, it’s said, is always written by the victor. Thus, most of us grew up with a particular view of the opening of the American west to white settlement. A good – even necessary – antidote to that one-sidedness (and an excellent companion read to Berger’s novel) is Dee Brown’s Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the American West, another older title that shouldn’t be missed. Its systematic (and well documented) undermining of the mythology of westward movement was controversial when it was first published (in 1970), but Brown’s retelling of the events from about 1860 to 1890 is now generally accepted by many historians. From the expulsion of the Navajos from their lands in Arizona in 1863 to the U.S. Army’s battle with the Sioux at Wounded Knee almost three decades later, readers get one heartbreaking account after another of broken promises, double crosses, and unprovoked attacks (the Sand Creek massacre is particularly painful to read about) after another. Book discussion groups might want to read Berger’s novel one month and Brown’s history the next – together they offer us a pretty complete view of a particularly important period in American history.




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