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Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Killing Custer Book Review Essay

From time to time, a book of true historical significance is written on a pillow slip that has been written on almost endlessly. The Battle of the Little big Horn is one of the most written ab unwrap, speculated on, celebrated, talked about, and glorified events in American History. Popularly known as Custers Last Stand, it has been the subject of many films, documentaries, novels, and was even re-enacted at every Wild West delegate put on by Buffalo Bill Cody. In the lean Killing Custer The Battle of Little Bighorn and the Fate of the Plains Indians, Welch and Stekler do an glorious job in the subject matter at hand, and come to the oppose conclusion that this battle, which was a huge military disaster for the United States, straightaway resulted in an even greater disaster for the Indian victors who won it that is, intact get the best and ingrained subjugation. The first chapter sets up the massacre of the Blackfeet on the Marias River, crowd together Welch and Paul Stekl er have done a magnificent job in researching and putting forth, a new book on this subject that has been so written about. Citing much of the new discoveries, that is archeology, and the Indian accounts, Welch was originall(a)y contacted by Stekler to do a script for a documentary for PBSs American Experience Last Stand at Little Bighorn. They worked on it together, and that particular one hour documentary was excellent. Feeling that he hadnt exhausted the subject, Welch delved more deeply into it, and wished to write a book on the subject. Killing Custer was the result, and it is quite excellent indeed. It is a stunning and thrilling choose from cover to cover.The information is not wholly new, but Welch and Stekler combine all of the newest discoveries into one stirring volume, and they stress the narratives, which in the past were largely cast away and disclaimed, of the Indian accounts of the battle, after all, they were the ones who survived it The authors rightly put the ba ttle into its historical perspective, pointing out that this huge defeat of the United States Military led directly to the total subjugation and defeat of the Plains Indians, putting them on reservations once and for all, with the final defeat and insult at Wounded Knee, the massacre that was so unnecessary and so tragic.

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