• The Fever Cabinet
  • Whitetooth Falls
    • Yellow Locust
    • Iron Circle
  • Other Work
  • About the Author
  • Justin Reads
  • Contact
Menu

Justin Joschko

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number
Author of Yellow Locust

Your Custom Text Here

Justin Joschko

  • The Fever Cabinet
  • Whitetooth Falls
  • Yellow Locust Series
    • Yellow Locust
    • Iron Circle
  • Other Work
  • About the Author
  • Justin Reads
  • Contact

Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the American West - Dee Brown

February 8, 2022 Justin Joschko

Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee was a title I’d always heard without knowing much of its contents. Its connection with American Indians was obvious from context, but whether it was a film or a novel or what I didn’t know. As it happens, the book is a historical chronicling of America’s western expansion in the second half of the nineteenth century, told entirely from the perspective of the tribes that were displaced or destroyed. It is a sad book, sympathetically told, and an important one, in that it collects the words and recollections of a people who were rarely allowed t ospeak for themselves—certainly not in as wide a forum.

There is a depressing repetitiveness to the book, which proceeds chronologically forward and, for the most part, geographically westward. In each chapter we meet (or occasionally revisit) a tribe, and watch as the same cycle repeats itself: pressure fro mwhite settlers forces the indians to accept some sort of treaty. The treaty is either a swindle from the outset, or bargained in good faith but reinterpretted later to be more beneficial to the United States government and less to the tribe. Tensions rise until the tribe is corralled into a reservation or goes to war with an enemy it cannot beat. Tactical intelligence sometimes brings brief victories, legal or martial, but the tide is inexorable, and it sweeps always west.

Though unflinching in its portrayal of history, this is not a bitter book. There are good white men who see the Indians as human beings and want to do right by them, and cynical tribes who ally with the American soldiers against other Indians in order to secure better terms for themselves. Yet individual goodness cannot perservere against an unfeeling system, and those who attempt to resist are either worn down into apathy or destroyed. In this sense it reminds me a bit of The Wire, a more modern example of flawed but good people bashing their heads against an unfeeling system in an effort to budge it an inch, and coming away with nothing for their troubles but pain.

Brown’s writing is strong and crisp, capturing some of the poetry of the men for which it speaks. Long passages are sometimes quoted which give particular evidence to the lyrical nature of native tongues, rich in metaphor and anchored closely to the land. I wouldn’t call Bury my Heart a light read, but it is an engaging and important one.

Tags Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, Dee Brown, non-fiction, american history, Indigenous Populations, 19th Century, American West, 1970

POWERED BY SQUARESPACE.