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CONTENTSNew Books 1-16
Distributed Clients 17
New in Paperback 18
Featured Backlist 19–21
Essential Backlist 22-28
Our MissionThe University of Utah Press is an agency of the J. Willard Marriott Library of The University of Utah. In accordance with the mission of the University, the Press publishes and disseminates scholarly books in selected fields and other printed and recorded materials of significance to Utah, the region, the country, and the world.
The University of Utah Press is a member of the Association of American University Presses.
On the Cover:Sundial Peak reflected in Lake Lillian, Twin Peaks Wilderness, Big Cottonwood Canyon © Howie Garber.
www.UofUpress.com
“The writing is at times highly
evocative, but it is the addition of
Havey’s artwork that sets this work
apart from and adds a new dimen-
sion to the Japanese concentra-
tion camp story. Havey includes
numerous small details that make
the period come alive and shed
new light on the prison camp
experience.”
—Nancy Matsumoto, writer and contributor to Time, Newsweek, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and The Densho Encyclopedia of the Japanese American Incarceration
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JUNE 2014 224 pp., 7 x 10
69 color images and b/w illustrationsCLOTH 978-1-60781-343-9 $29.95
EBOOK 978-1-60781-345-3
Gasa Gasa Girl Goes to CampA Nisei Youth behind a World War II Fence
Lily Yuriko Nakai Havey
Foreword by Chestin Lyon
This creative memoir tells a coming-of-age story set in a WWII Japanese American prison camp.
Lily Nakai and her family lived in Southern California, where some-
times she and a friend dreamt of climbing the Hollywood sign that
lit the night. At age ten, after believing that her family was simply
going on a camping trip, she found herself living in a barrack, gaz-
ing out instead at the nightly searchlight. She wondered if anything
would ever be normal again.
In this creative memoir, Lily Havey combines storytelling, water-
color, and personal photographs to recount her youthful incarcer-
ation in two Japanese American camps during World War II. She
uses short vignettes—snapshots of people, recreated scenes and
events— to describe how a ten-year-old girl grew into a teenager
inside these camps. Vintage photographs reveal the historical, cul-
tural, and familial contexts of that growth and of the Nakai fami-
ly’s dislocation. They reveal the recollected lives of her mother and
father in Japan and then America, where they began their arranged
marriage and had two children. Havey’s vivid and poignant water-
colors depict decades-old memories and dreams and reflect
moments of daily camp life illuminated by the author’s adult per-
spective. The paintings and her animated writing draw readers into
a turbulent era when America disgracefully imprisoned, without due
process, thousands of American citizens because of their race.
These stories of love, loss, and discovery recall a girl balanced
precariously between childhood and adolescence. In turns funny,
wrenching, touching, and biting but consistently engrossing, they
elucidate the daily challenges of life in the camp.
When, in 1980, Havey travelled across the Pacific and for the first
time met her uncle Iwatake, a Zen Buddhist priest, she finally under-
stood, in retrospect, her mother’s words years before in camp: “You
are American, but you are also Japanese.”
LILY HAVEY was born in Los Angeles. In 1942, along with 120,000 per-sons of Japanese descent, she was incarcerated at in a Japanese American prison camp. After World War II her family moved to Salt Lake City, where she attended West High School and the University of Utah. She graduated from the New England Conservatory of Music and pursued an MFA at the University of Utah. She taught high school for thirteen years before establishing a stained glass business.
“Havey has a distinctive voice and a gift
for writing—the text flows, even when she
is discussing emotionally difficult material.
She also has a talent for putting herself
inside the head of her rebellious preteen
self and explaining how she felt at the
time, which gives the work immediacy. The
book not only speaks eloquently about the
pressures on the camp inmates, but pro-
vides useful insight into some hitherto hid-
den matters.”
—Greg Robinson, author of A Tragedy of Democ-racy: Japanese Confinement in North America and After Camp: Portraits in Midcentury Japanese American Life and Politics
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Hiking the WasatchThird Edition
John Veranth
An updated edition of the most detailed guide to hiking the trails of the Wasatch Mountains
Utah’s Wasatch Mountains, with three wilderness areas and hun-
dreds of miles of trails, offer treasures of outdoor opportunities
within easy reach of nearly a million people. Yet the steep rugged
terrain can seem intimidating to new hikers, and many parts of the
Wasatch are relatively unknown and seldom visited. John Veranth
has hiked all over these mountains and has written a comprehensive
guidebook for both the beginner and the expert hiker.
Trails range from nearly level walks requiring less than an hour
to ascents that challenge experienced mountaineers. To assist in
selecting an appropriate trail, hikes are listed according to best sea-
son, time required, objective, and desired level of difficulty. The easy
trails have the most detailed descriptions to aid beginners, while
expert trails have sparse descriptions to preserve the adventure.
Maps, photos, and line drawings are included and detailed driv-
ing directions to the trailheads are consolidated to save repetition.
The area’s geology, flora and fauna, and human history are also dis-
cussed to further appreciation of this mountain environment.
Since the first publication of Hiking the Wasatch, there have
been numerous changes to these trails, especially along the
foothill– urban interface. This third edition contains full updates
based on the author’s field checking, comments from members of
the Wasatch Mountain Club, and information from land-manage-
ment agencies. Hiking the Wasatch is the essential and comprehen-
sive guidebook for exploring these mountain trails.
JOHN VERANTH is president of the Wasatch Mountain Club and an avid hiker. His love of mountains prompted him years ago to move from the East Coast to Utah; he has been exploring the Wasatch ever since. When not outdoors, he works as research associate professor at the University of Utah, where he stud-ies the health effects of fine particles in the air.
Praise for the second edition
of Hiking the Wasatch:
“Still considered the most definitive and
accurate guide to the Cottonwood Can-
yons, Mill Creek Canyon, and other areas
on the Wasatch Front.”
—Salt Lake Magazine, “Five Best Guidebooks to Utah’s Outdoors”
GUIDEBOOKS AND OUTDOORS/UTAH
MAY 2014 240 pp., 6 x 9
52 images, 9 figures, 1 table, 13 mapsPAPER 978-1-60781-325-5 $16.95
EBOOK 978-1-60781-326-2
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UTAH/WESTERN HISTORY
JUNE 2014 288 pp., 6 x 9
10 Illustrations and 1 mapPAPER 978-1-60781-347-7 $14.95
EBOOK 978-1-60781-348-4
PUBLISHED IN PARTNERSHIP WITH ZION NATURAL HISTORY ASSOCIATION
A Zion Canyon ReaderEdited by Nathan N. Waite and Reid L. Neilson
Foreword by Lyman Hafen
Literary descriptions and rich histories of one of America’s favorite scenic landscapes
Zion National Park is one of North America’s most-visited and best-
loved national parks. For the first time, lovers of the park have in
one volume the best that has been written about the canyon. A Zion
Canyon Reader is a collection of historical and literary accounts that
presents diverse perspectives on Zion Canyon—and the surround-
ing southern Utah region—through the eyes of native inhabitants,
pioneer settlers, boosters, explorers, artists, park rangers, develop-
ers, and spiritual seekers. Through the pages of this book, both the
newest visitors to Zion and those who return to the park again and
again will come to understand what this place has meant to differ-
ent people over the centuries.
Among the works included are well-known historical accounts
of exploration by John Wesley Powell, Clarence Dutton, and Everett
Ruess. Writings by Edward Abbey, Wallace Stegner, Juanita Brooks,
and others enlighten and excite in humorous memorable chapters.
Here and there the book bears witness to conflicting viewpoints on
controversies associated with the national park, especially develop-
ment vs. preservation and locals vs. outsiders.
Lyman Hafen, author and executive director of the Zion Nat-
ural History Association, calls the book “the most comprehensive,
insightful, and inspiring compilation of Zion writing ever assem-
bled.” As readers learn about the plants, animals, geology, history,
and people of Zion Canyon, they will discover unfamiliar corners of
the park and see favorite hikes in a new light.
NATHAN N. WAITE works for the Joseph Smith Papers Project in Salt Lake City, Utah. He holds an MA in American studies and environmental humanities from the University of Utah. Although he now resides in northern Utah, he still con-siders his native St. George his home. He and his wife, Michelle, regularly take their three kids to Zion National Park.
REID L. NEILSON is managing director of the Church History Department of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He is the award-winning author or editor of over twenty books, including Early Mormon Missionary Activities in Japan, 1901–1924 (University of Utah Press, 2010). He lives in Bountiful, Utah, with his wife, Shelly, and their four children.
“There is not a collection of writings rep-
resenting the human experience of and in
Zion Canyon quite like this one.”
—Louise Excell, Professor Emeritus, Dixie State University
“I found it fascinating. The content has
such a variety—water, flora and fauna,
Native Americans, famous authors, trip
journals, historical events such as the dedi-
cation, the Zion Tunnel, the building of the
lodge, naming the mountains, rail access
to the canyon and the Union Pacific facil-
ities, geology, and the Zion Cable. Impor-
tant authors are included and their pieces
are significant.”
—Douglas Alder, professor of history, Dixie State University
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Wrecks of Human AmbitionA History of Utah’s Canyon Country to 1936
Paul T. Nelson
The red rock canyon country of southeastern Utah and northeast-
ern Arizona is one of the most isolated, wild, and beautiful regions
of North America. Europeans and Americans over time have mostly
avoided, disdained, or ignored it. Wrecks of Human Ambition illus-
trates how this landscape undercut notions and expectations of
good, productive land held by the first explorers, settlers, and trav-
elers who visited it. Even today, its aridity and sandy soils prevent
widespread agricultural exploitation and its cliffs, canyons, and riv-
ers thwart quick travel in and through the landscape.
Most of the previous works regarding the history of this unique
region has focused on either early exploration or twentieth- century
controversies that erupted over mineral and water development
and the creation of national parks and wilderness areas. This vol-
ume fills a gap in existing histories by focusing on historical themes
dating from the confrontation between Euro-Christian ideals and
the challenging landscape. Nelson’s narrative centers on three inter-
connected interpretations of the area that unfolded when visitors
from green, well-watered, productive lands approached this desert.
The Judeo-Christian obligation to “make the desert bloom” encom-
passed ideas of millenarianism and of Indian conversion and accul-
turation as well as the Old Testament symbolism of the “garden” and
the “desert.” A conflicting sentiment saw the region simply as bad
land to avoid, an idea strongly held by U.S. government explorers in
the 1850s. Finally, though, the rise of tourism brought new ideas of
wilderness reverence to the canyon country. The bad lands became
valuable precisely because they were so distinct from traditionally
settled landscapes.
Paul Nelson provides in clear, engaging language the most
detailed examination yet published of colonial Spain’s encounter
with the region and lays out some of Mormonism’s rare failures in
settling the arid West.
PAUL T. NELSON is a native Utahn and lifelong lover of canyon country, hav-ing climbed, rafted, and hiked through the region extensively. He holds a PhD in American history from Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas, and he currently lives, climbs, and rafts in the more temperate terrain of Fayette-ville, West Virginia.
“Nelson chronicles how generations of
missionaries, explorers, traders, settlers,
gold seekers, and premodern tourists
approached, perceived, passed through,
settled, and were confounded by the
other worldly red rock deserts of south-
ern Utah and northern Arizona. Readers
will come away with fresh insights into old
tales, having themselves experienced the
canyon country with new eyes. A skilled
story teller, Nelson has produced a fine
work of western American history.”
—Jedediah S. Rogers, author of Roads in the Wilder-ness (University of Utah Press, 2013)
UTAH/WESTERN HISTORY
APRIL 2014 312 pp., 6 x 9
10 Illustrations, 7 mapsPAPER 978-1-60781-333-0 $24.95
EBOOK 978-1-60781-334-7
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MAY 2014 480 pp., 6 1⁄8 x 9 ¼
35 illustrationsCLOTH 978-1-60781-344-6 $34.95
EBOOK 978-1-60781-346-0
Joseph’s TemplesThe Dynamic Relationship between Freemasonry and Mormonism
Michael W. Homer
Freemasonry’s significant place in the early history of Mormonism
The apparent parallels between Mormon ritual and doctrine and
those of Freemasonry have long been recognized. That Joseph
Smith, Brigham Young, and other early church leaders were Masons,
at least for a time, is common knowledge. Yet while early histori-
ans of the LDS Church openly acknowledged this connection, the
question of influence was later dismissed and almost became taboo
among faithful church members. Just as Mormons have tried to
downplay any ties to Freemasonry, Masons have sought to distance
themselves from Mormonism. In Joseph’s Temples, Michael Homer
reveals how deeply the currents of Freemasonry and Mormonism
entwined in the early nineteenth century. He goes on to lay out the
declining course of relations between the two movements, until a
détente in recent years.
There are indications that Freemasonry was a pervasive foun-
dational element in Mormonism and that its rituals and origin leg-
ends influenced not just the secret ceremonies of the LDS temples
but also such important matters as the organization of the Mor-
mon priesthood, the foundation of the women’s Relief Society, the
introduction and concealment of polygamy, and the church’s posi-
tion on African Americans’ full membership. Freemasonry was also
an important facet of Mormons’ relations with broader American
society.
The two movements intertwined within a historical context
of early American intellectual, social, and religious ferment, which
influenced each of them and in varying times and situations placed
them either in the current or against the flow of mainstream Amer-
ican culture and politics. Joseph’s Temples provides a comprehen-
sive examination of a dynamic relationship and makes a significant
contribution to the history of Mormonism, Freemasonry, and their
places in American history.
MICHAEL W. HOMER practices law in Salt Lake City. He is an award-winning author and has published numerous articles in the fields of law and Mormon-ism. He is the editor of On the Way to Somewhere Else: European Sojourners in the Mormon West, 1834–1930 (University of Utah Press, 2010).
“The significance of Michael Homer’s work
cannot be overstated. He has accom-
plished what no other author has done on
this topic. Mormon studies has been wait-
ing for a work like this.”
—Michael G. Reed, author of Banishing the Cross: The Emergence of a Mormon Taboo
“The definitive treatment by the
acknowledged authority in this field—
long awaited and needed since the
1820s. Homer skips the nonsense but not
the details in this masterful perspective
on the many meanings of Masonry in the
Mormon world.”
—Rick Grunder, editor of Mormon Parallels: A Biblio-graphic Source
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Helen Andelin and the Fascinating Womanhood MovementJulie Debra Neuffer
The other women’s movement—a backlash to women’s liberation
In 1961, Helen Andelin, a disillusioned housewife and mother of
eight, languished in a lackluster, twenty-year-old marriage. A reli-
gious woman, she spent long periods in fasting and prayer asking
for help to improve her marriage. While studying a set of women’s
advice booklets from the 1920s, Andelin had an epiphany that not
only changed her life but also affected the lives of millions of Amer-
ican women. She applied the principles from the booklets to her
unhappy marriage and found that her difficult and disinterested
husband became loving and attentive. He bought her gifts and hur-
ried home from the office to be with her. Their marriage was revi-
talized. Andelin took her new-found happiness as a sign that God
wanted her to share these principles with other women and began
teaching classes at her church. The results were dramatic. In 1963, at
the urging of her followers, Andelin wrote and self-published Fas-
cinating Womanhood. The book, taken almost word for word from
those 1920s advice booklets, sold hundreds of thousands of copies
and launched a nationwide organization of classes and seminars led
by thousands of volunteer teachers.
Countering second-wave feminists in the 1960s, Andelin
preached family values and traditional gender roles for women.
She urged women not to have careers, but to become good wives,
mothers, and homemakers instead. A woman’s true happiness,
taught Andelin, could only be realized if she admired, cared for, and
obeyed her husband. As her notoriety grew, so did the backlash
from her critics. Undeterred, she founded an organization, started a
newsletter with a nationwide subscription, and became involved in
politics.
Andelin spoke to millions of women during a time of social
unrest. Her message calling for the return to traditional roles
appealed to them during a time of uncertainty and radical social
change. This study provides an evenhanded and important look at
a crucial, but often overlooked cross section of American women as
they navigated their way through the turbulent decades following
the post-war calm of the 1950s.
JULIE NEUFFER earned her master’s degree in religious studies from Gonzaga University and her Ph.D. in American history from Washington State University. She currently teaches American his-tory at Eastern Washington University in Cheney, Washington.
“There is much to be learned in this clearly
written, sympathetic account of Helen
Andelin’s Fascinating Womanhood. This
is a book that reveals that there is another
side to women’s history that needs to be
explored by scholars.”
—Donald Critchlow, professor, Arizona State Univer-sity, and author of Phyllis Schlafly and Grassroots Con-servatism and When Hollywood Was Right
“Neuffer’s analysis of the various aspects
of the Andelin/Friedan conflict and what
they reveal about the fragmenting and
turbulent women’s movement during the
1970s is outstanding.”
—Lavina Fielding Anderson, editor of Lucy’s Book: A Critical Edition of Lucy Mack Smith’s Family Memoir
WOMEN’S STUDIES/MORMON STUDIES
MAY 2014 240 pp., 6 x 9
9 b/w illus.PAPER 978-1-60781-327-9 $19.95
EBOOK 978-1-60781-328-6
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JUNE 2014 240 pp., 7 x 10
173 b/w and color illus.PAPER 978-1-60781-358-3 $19.95
EBOOK 978-1-60781-359-0
W E R E M E M BER , W E CE L E BR AT E , W E BE L I E V E
Latinos in Utah • Armando Solórzano
R E C U E R D OC E L E B R A C I Ó N
E S P E R A N Z AY
We Remember, We Celebrate, We Believe / Recuerdo, Celebración, y EsperanzaHistory of Latinos in Utah
Armando Solórzano
A bilingual history of Latinos in Utah told through photographs and narrative
The history of Mexican Americans in Utah is complex, but it is a his-
tory that is neither well represented in the mainstream literature
nor well recognized in the mainstream understanding of Utah’s
past. Convoluted interactions among Native Americans, Spaniards,
French, Mexicans, Anglos, and others shaped the story of Utah.
Awareness of the long presence of Hispanics in Utah is essential to
understanding the history of the state. This volume is an attempt to
piece together that history through photos and oral histories.
As Armando Solórzano and other researchers conducted oral
history interviews with Mexicans, Mexican Americans, and other
Latinos throughout the state, a number of participants began giving
the team photographs, some dating back to 1895, which provided
an opportunity to reconstruct a history through pictures, as a com-
munity project. Within two years, Solórzano and his colleagues were
able to create the pictorial history of Mexican Americans and Latinos
in Utah and launch their efforts as a photo-documentary exhibit.
The collected photographs represent different historical periods and
the manifold contributions of Latinos to the State of Utah.
Readers may see these photos as artistic expressions or artifacts
of history or photographic technique. Some readers will see images
of their relatives and precursors who labored to create a better life
in Utah. The images evoke both nostalgia for a time gone by and the
possibility of reconstructing history with a fairer premise. This book
can not tell the full story of Latinos in Utah but should prove to be a
catalyst, inspiring others to continue documenting and reconstruct-
ing the neglected threads of Utah’s history, making it truly the his-
tory of all.
ARMANDO SOLÓRZANO is director of Chicano Studies at the University of Utah, where he holds joint faculty appointments in Ethnic Studies and Family and Consumer Studies. He is the author of Fiebre Dorada o Fiebre Amarilla?: La Fundación Rock-efeller en México.
“This book promises to be a major addi-
tion to Utah historical literature. It will be
one of those rare volumes that possesses
both scholarly and broad popular appeal.”
—Gary Topping, author of If I Get Out Alive: The World War II Letters and Diaries of William H. McDougall Jr.
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An 1860 English-Hopi Vocabulary Written in the Deseret AlphabetKenneth R. Beesley and Dirk Elzinga
A book of ethnography,history, and linguistics
In 1859 Brigham Young sent two Mormon missionaries to live among
the Hopi, “reduce their dialect to a written language,” and then teach
it to the Hopi so that they would be able to read the Book of Mor-
mon in their own tongue. Young also instructed the men to teach
the Hopi the Deseret alphabet, a phonemic system that he was pro-
moting in place of the traditional Latin alphabet. While the Deseret
alphabet faded out of use in just over twenty years, the manuscript
penned by one of the missionaries has remained in existence. For
decades it sat unidentified in the archives of the Church of Jesus
Christ of the Latter-day Saints—a mystery document having no title,
author, or date. But authors Beesley and Elzinga have now traced
the manuscript’s origin to those missionaries of 1859 and decoded
its Hopi- English vocabulary written in the short-lived Deseret alpha-
bet. The resulting book offers a fascinating mix of linguistics, Mor-
mon history, and Native American studies.
The volume reproduces all 486 vocabulary entries of the orig-
inal manuscript, presenting the Deseret and the modern English
and Hopi translations. It explains the history of the Deseret alphabet
as well as that of the Mormon missions to the Hopi, while fleshing
out the background of the two missionaries, Marion Jackson Shel-
ton, who wrote the manuscript, and his companion, Thales Hastings
Haskell. The book will be of interest to linguists, historians, ethnogra-
phers, and others who are curious about the unique combination of
topics this work connects.
KENNETH R. BEESLEY is a computational linguist with thirty years of experi-ence in natural language processing. He holds a D.Phil. in epistemics from the University of Edinburgh and is currently a development architect in the text analysis group at SAP Labs. He spends his spare time researching the Deseret alphabet and other spelling reforms, Hopi history and language, and nine-teenth-century pioneer trails in Utah and Arizona.
DIRK ELZINGA is associate professor in the Department of Linguistics and English Language at Brigham Young University. He holds a PhD in linguistics from the University of Arizona. His primary research interests are the docu-mentation, description, and analysis of the Uto-Aztecan languages of the Great Basin and Colorado Plateau.
“This is a truly exciting mystery story. It is
clearly written and easy to follow. While
the book is technical when it has to be, the
lay reader can still profit from its multifari-
ous plot lines.”
—Mauricio J. Mixco, Emeritus Professor of linguistics, University of Utah
“Useful and interesting to all those inter-
ested in Hopi language, Hopi culture, and
Hopi history.”
—Peter Whiteley, American Museum of Natural History
NATIVE AMERICAN STUDIES / MORMON HISTORY / LINGUISTICS
MAY 2014 176 pp., 6 x 9
1 map, 14 b/w illus., 5 tablesPAPER 978-1-60781-353-8 $19.95
EBOOK 978-1-60781-354-5
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MAY 2014 304 pp., 6 x 9
78 Illustrations, 1 table, 1 mapCLOTH 978-1-60781-329-3 $45.00s
EBOOK 978-1-60781-330-9
Rancher ArchaeologistA Career in Two Different Worlds
George C. Frison
Foreword by William “Bill” Woodcock
Sometimes childhood events can shape a person’s destiny. Such
was the case for George Frison. His father’s accidental death meant
that Frison was raised by his grandparents, thus experiencing life
on a ranch instead of the small town childhood he otherwise would
have had. He was fascinated by the wealth of prehistoric artifacts on
the ranch; eventually, this interest prompted him to change his life’s
course at age thirty-seven.
In this memoir, Frison shares his work and his atypical journey
from rancher to professor and archaeologist. Herding cattle, chop-
ping watering holes in sub-zero weather, and guiding hunters in the
fall were very different than teaching classes, performing laboratory
work, and attending faculty and committee meetings in air-con-
ditioned buildings. But his practical and observational experience
around both domestic and wild animals proved a valuable asset
to his research. His knowledge of specific animal behaviors added
insight to his studies of the Paleoindians of the Northern Plains as he
sought to understand how their stone tools were used most effec-
tively for hunting and how bison jumps, mammoth kills, and sheep
traps actually worked. Frison’s careful research and strong involve-
ment in the scholarly and organizational aspects of archaeology
made him influential not only as an authority on the prehistory of
the Northern Plains but also as a leader in Wyoming archaeology
and North American archaeology at large.
This book will appeal to both the professional and the lay
reader with interests in archaeology, anthropology, paleontol-
ogy, plains history, animal science, hunting, or game management.
Frison’s shift from ranching to academic archaeology serves as a
reminder that you are never too old to change your life.
GEORGE C. FRISON is professor emeritus of anthropology at the University of Wyoming. He served as Wyoming’s first state archaeologist and as president of the Plains Anthropologist Society and the Society of American Archaeology. He is the author or coauthor of numerous publications including Survival by Hunt-ing, The Mill Iron Site, and Hell Gap: A Stratified Paleoindian Campsite at the Edge of the Rockies (with Marcel Kornfeld and Mary Lou Larsen, University of Utah Press, 2009).
“Although focused on the High Plains, the
book tells much about how good dirt and
analytical archaeology ought to get done
anywhere.”
—Don D. Fowler, Mamie Kleberg Professor of Historic Preservation and Anthropology Emeritus, University of Nevada, Reno
“George Frison is one of the leading pre-
historians (if not the leading prehistorian)
who has worked on the Northern Plains,
and his influence extends well beyond the
limits of his geographical expertise. Frison
elevated the study of prehistoric hunting
technology, notably among Paleoindians,
to a rarefied behavioral and even theoret-
ical level.”
—J. M. Adovasio, Mercyhurst Archaeological Institute
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A Fateful Day in 1698The Remarkable Sobaipuri-O’odham Victory
Deni J. Seymour
In 1698, the Apache and their allies attacked a sleeping Sobaipuri-
O’odham village on the San Pedro River at the northern edge of New
Spain, now in southern Arizona. This book, about one of the most
important southwestern battles of the era in this region, reads like
a mystery. At the same time, it addresses in a scholarly fashion the
methodological question of how we can confidently infer anything
reliable about the past.
Translations of original Spanish accounts by Father Kino and
others convey important details about the battle, while the archae-
ological record and ethnographic and oral traditions provide impor-
tant correctives to the historical account. A new battlefield signature
of Native American conflict is identified, and the fiery context of the
battle provides unprecedented information about what the Sobai-
puri grew and hunted in this out-of-the-way location, including the
earliest known wheat.
That this tumultuous time was a period of flux is reflected in the
defensive, communal, and ceremonial architecture of the O’odham,
which accommodated Spanish tastes and techniques. Practices spe-
cific to the O’odham as they relate to the day’s events and to vil-
lage life illuminate heretofore unexplained aspects of the battle. The
book also records a visit by descendant O’odham, reinforcing the
importance of identifying the historically documented location.
A Fateful Day in 1698 will be of significant interest to archaeolo-
gists and historians.
DENI SEYMOUR is a full-time research archaeologist affiliated with two aca-demic institutions and the nonprofit research group Jornada Research Insti-tute. She is the author of Where the Earth and Sky Are Sewn Together (The University of Utah Press, 2011) and the editor of From the Land of Ever Winter to the American Southwest: Athapaskan Migrations, Mobility, and Ethnogenesis (The University of Utah Press, 2012).
“Seymour’s study examines all the primary
sources and then incorporates her archae-
ological conclusions from the battlefield of
this historic engagement to tell the defini-
tive story of what happened. None has the
complete story as does Seymour’s book.”
—Edwin Sweeney, author of Mangas Coloradas: Chief of the Chiricahua Apaches and From Cochise to Geron-imo: The Chiricahua Apaches, 1874–1886.
“The volume presents a model for inte-
grating ethnography, historic documents,
and archaeological data into a method
for reconstructing past behavior. It will set
the standard of how future archaeologists
and ethnohistorians will identify and con-
firm specific locations in the archaeologi-
cal record.”
—David Hill, consultant, Archaeological Research & Technology, Inc.
ARCHAEOLOGY/ANTHROPOLOGY
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105 illus, 10 maps, 1 tableCLOTH 978-1-60781-286-9 $50.00s
EBOOK 978-1-60781-287-6
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ARCHAEOLOGY / ANTHROPOLOGY
MAY 2014 288 pp., 7 x 10
15 Illustrations, 27 figures, 21 tables, 34 mapsCLOTH 978-1-60781-331-6 $50.00s
EBOOK 978-1-60781-332-3
Alliance and Landscape on Perry Mesa in the Fourteenth CenturyEdited by David R. Abbott and Katherine A. Spielmann
A fascinating story of population movement during a time of widespread environmental challenges and political unrest
About forty miles north of Phoenix, Arizona, Perry Mesa is part
of Agua Fria National Monument today, but during the late thir-
teenth and early fourteenth centuries, this windswept arid land-
scape became the site of numerous farming communities. This book
explores why people moved to Perry Mesa at that time. Analyses of
Perry Mesa contrast with those of the iconic large-scale migrations
in the prehistoric Southwest such as the Kayenta diaspora and the
gathering of the clans at Hopi. Unlike those long-distance move-
ments into occupied regions, the Perry Mesa case is one of relatively
localized aggregation on a largely vacant landscape. But, as was dis-
covered with the iconic migrations, ethnogenesis (the creation of
new identities) took hold on Perry Mesa, making it an extremely
interesting counterpoint to the better-known migrations of the
period.
Contributors to this volume examine the migration process
under two explanatory frameworks: alliance and landscape. These
frameworks are used to explore competing hypotheses, positing
either a rapid colonization associated with an alliance organized
for warfare at a regional scale, or a more protracted migration as
this landscape became comparatively more attractive for migrating
farmers in the late thirteenth century.
As the first major publication on the archaeology of Perry Mesa,
this volume contributes to theoretical perspectives on migration
and ethnogenesis, the study of warfare in the prehistoric South-
west, the study of intensive agricultural practices in a marginal envi-
ronment, and the cultural history of a little studied and largely
unknown portion of the ancient Southwest. It not only documents
the migration but also the ensuing birth of a new ethnic identity
that arose from the coalescence of diverse groups atop Perry Mesa.
“The authors present new interpreta-
tions on a critical but little studied area for
understanding the late pre-Hispanic era of
central Arizona and the southern South-
west. Each chapter represents a schol-
arly and well-researched contribution that
contains significant new information and
contributes to the broader interpretive
themes.”
—Paul R. Fish, professor of anthropology, University of Arizona
DAVID R. ABBOTT is associate professor of anthropology in the School of Human Evolution and Social Change at Arizona State University. His previous publications include Ceramics and Com-munity Organization among the Hohokam and Cen-turies of Decline during the Hohokam Classic Period at Pueblo Grande.
KATHERINE A. SPIELMANN is professor at the School of Human Evolution and Social Change and a senior scientist at the Global Institute of Sustain-ability at Arizona State University.
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Life and Politics at the Royal Court of AguatecaArtifacts, Analytical Data, and Synthesis
Edited by Takeshi Inomata and Daniela Triadan
Volume Three of Monographs of the Aguateca Archaeological Project First Phase
Aguateca is a Classic Mayan site located in the Petexbatun region of
Guatemala. It was unexpectedly attacked around AD 810, its central
area was burned, and its residents fled or were taken captive. In this
volume, Takeshi Inomata, Daniela Triadan, and their team examine
the life of the Mayan royal family, nobles, and their retainers through
the analysis of numerous complete and reconstructible artifacts left
in the site’s elite residential area.
Because of the surprise nature of the attack, most artifacts were
left in their original locations, providing unprecedented views of
the daily life of the Classic Maya. Detailed analyses of these objects
and their distribution has shown that Mayan elites stored some of
their food in their residences and that they also conducted vari-
ous administrative duties there. The presence of numerous precious
ornaments indicates that many of the Maya elite were also skilled
craft producers.
Life and Politics at the Royal Court of Aguateca is the third and
final volume of the monograph series on Aguateca. It presents the
analyses of items not covered in the first two volumes, including fig-
urines, ceramic laminates and masks, spindle whorls, ground stone,
and bone artifacts, as well as hieroglyphic texts and plant and ani-
mal remains. It discusses the broad implications of this remarkable
data set and provides a summation of the project.
TAKESHI INOMATA is co-director of the Aguateca Archaeological Project and associate professor of anthropology at the University of Arizona.
DANIELA TRIADAN is co-director of the Aguateca Archaeological Project and associate professor of anthropology at the University of Arizona. She is also a research assistant with the Smithsonian Institute.
“This is a tour de force. Each author has
clearly explained the subject of each chap-
ter. The contextual analyses are unprec-
edented in their detail as a result of the
special circumstances of preservation in
the site core. The final syntheses are lucid
and persuasive, written in the best tradi-
tion of Maya research.”
—David Freidel, Washington University at Saint Louis
“This is writing of the highest caliber. There
is no other publication in the Maya area
that describes and interprets the activi-
ties of elites in such fine-grained detail,
based on unusually well-preserved data.
This volume will be consulted by scholars
for many decades, and by generations of
students.”
—Payson Sheets, University of Colorado, Boulder
ARCHAEOLOGY / ANTHROPOLOGY
APRIL 2014 424 pp., 8 ½ x 11
85 Illustrations, 104 figures, 46 tables, 38 mapsCLOTH 978-1-60781-318-7 $60.00s
EBOOK 978-1-60781-319-4
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The Young Turks and the Ottoman NationalitiesArmenians, Greeks, Albanians, Jews, and Arabs, 1908–1918
Feroz Ahmad
The rise of nationalism at the end of the Ottoman Empire
The years 1908 to 1918 are frequently viewed as the period when the
Ottoman Empire fell into decline, but in this volume Feroz Ahmad
argues that the empire was not in decline but instead had come
face to face with a widespread process of decolonization. Its colo-
nies, stimulated by the idea of nationalism, sought to liberate them-
selves, sometimes with the help of the Great Powers of Europe, who
in turn saw these rebellions as an opportunity to expand their own
empires. While these ethno-nationalist movements have often been
described in terms of Ottoman oppressor versus conspiring nation-
alists, here they are presented as part of a broad historical process.
Ahmad holds that nationalism was introduced into the Otto-
man Empire during the French Revolution, providing kindling for
the struggles that later emerged. Setting the stage with this nine-
teenth-century background, Ahmad then examines each Ottoman
nationality in the wake of the restoration of the Ottoman constitu-
tion in 1908. Officially known as the Committee of Union and Prog-
ress (CUP), the Young Turks made up a nationalist political party
that ruled the Ottoman state from 1908 until the end of World War
I. Ahmad illuminates the relationships and conflicts between the
Young Turks and the Greek, Armenian, Albanian, Jewish, and Arab
ethnic groups during this period. Placing these nationalities in their
historical context, he shows their relationships not only to the Young
Turks but also to one another—no other single book has attempted
to look closely at all of these connections.
Clearly organized and written, the book will enlighten not
only students and scholars of the era, but also anyone interested in
understanding the roots of current-day relations in the Balkans and
Middle East.
Born and raised in New Delhi, India, FEROZ AHMAD began studying the Young Turks for his PhD dissertation at the University of London. He is cur-rently chair of the Department of International Relations and Political Science at Yeditepe University in Istanbul and has served on the editorial board of the International Journal of Middle East Studies. He is the author of several books.
“The book rescues the study of national-
ity in the late Ottoman Empire from the
demonizing vantages (‘Ottoman oppres-
sion’ on the one hand and ethno-nation-
alist ‘treachery’ on the other) prevalent in
the scholarship and situates it in world-
historical processes. It addresses both the
pre-1914 period and World War I and thus
bridges a chronological divide entrenched
in the historiography while offering a com-
parative and relational analysis of multi-
ple ethno-national groups.”
—Hasan Kayali, author of Arabs and Young Turks: Otto-manism, Arabism, and Islamism in the Ottoman Empire, 1908–1918
MIDDLE EAST STUDIES
APRIL 2014192 pp., 6 x 9
PAPER 978-1-60781-339-2 $25.00
EBOOK 978-1-60781-338-5
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The Tanner Lectures on Human ValuesVolume 33
Edited by Mark Matheson
The Tanner Lectures on Human Values, founded July 1, 1978, at
Clare Hall, Cambridge University, was established by the American
scholar, industrialist, and philanthropist Obert Clark Tanner. Lec-
tureships are awarded to outstanding scholars or leaders in broadly
defined fields of human values and transcend ethnic, national, reli-
gious, or ideological distinctions. Volume 33 features lectures given
during the academic year 2012–2013 at Stanford University, the Uni-
versity of Michigan, the University of Oxford, the University of Cali-
fornia Berkeley, Harvard University, the University of Utah, and the
U.S. Ambassador’s Palace, Paris, France.
William G. Bowen, “Costs and Productivity in Higher Education” and “Prospects
for an Online Fix: Can We Harness Technology in the Service of Our Aspirations?”
William G. Bowen was president of the Andrew W. Mellon Foun-dation from 1988 to 2006 and of Princeton University from 1972 to 1988, where he was also a professor of economics and public affairs. He is the author of many books, including Lessons Learned: Reflections of a University President and Crossing the Finish Line: Completing College at America’s Public Universities.
Craig Calhoun, “The Problematic Public: Revisiting Dewey, Arendt, and Habermas”
Craig Calhoun is a world-renowned social scientist whose work connects sociology to culture, communication, politics, philos-ophy, and economics. His books include Nations Matter, Criti-cal Social Theory, Neither Gods Nor Emperors, and The Roots of Radicalism.
Michael Ignatieff, “Representation and Responsibility: Ethics and Public Office”
Michael Ignatieff is a professor at the Munk School of Global Affairs, University of Toronto, and the Kennedy School of Govern-ment, Harvard University. He is also the Centennial Chair of the Carnegie Council on Ethics and International Affairs in New York. His recent books include Human Rights as Politics and Idolatry; The Lesser Evil: Political Ethics in an Age of Terror; and Fire and Ashes: Success and Failure in Politics.
F. M. Kamm, “Who Turned the Trolley?” and “How Was the Trolley Turned?”
F. M. Kamm is Littauer Professor of Philosophy and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School and professor of philosophy at Harvard University. Her books include Creation and Abortion and The Moral Target: Aiming at Right Conduct in War and Other Conflicts.
Claude Lanzmann, “Resurrection”
Claude Lanzmann is a filmmaker and the editor-in-chief of Les Temps Modernes, the journal founded by Jean Paul Sartre in 1945. Shoah, his 1985 film about the Holocaust, is recognized as a land-mark of world cinema. In 2013 he was awarded the Honorary Golden Bear at the Berlin International Film Festival.
Robert Post, “Representative Democracy: The Constitutional The-ory of Campaign Finance Reform” and “Campaign Finance Reform and the First Amendment”
Robert Post is dean and Sol & Lillian Goldman Professor of Law at Yale Law School. He has written and edited numerous books, including Democracy, Expertise, Academic Freedom: A First Amend-ment Jurisprudence for the Modern State; For the Common Good: Principles of American Academic Freedom (with Matthew M. Finkin); and Constitutional Domains: Democracy, Community, Management.
Michael J. Sandel, “The Moral Economy of Speculation: Gam-bling, Finance, and the Common Good”
Michael J. Sandel is the Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Professor of Government at Harvard University, where he teaches political philosophy. His books include Liberalism and the Limits of Justice; Public Philosophy: Essays on Morality in Politics; The Case against Perfection: Ethics in the Age of Genetic Engineering; and What Money Can’t Buy: The Moral Limits of Markets.
PHILOSOPHY
JULY 2014 368 pp., 6 x 9
26 figures, 1 tableCLOTH 978-1-60781-349-1 $35.00s
EBOOK 978-1-60781-390-7
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CO-PUBLISHED WITH THE WALLACE STEGNER CENTER FOR LAND, RESOURCES AND THE ENVIRONMENT AND THE J. WILLARD MARRIOTT LIBRARY SPECIAL COLLECTIONS DEPARTMENT
The Emerging Alliance of Religion and Ecology Mary Evelyn Tucker
2013 Wallace Stegner Lecture
The environmental crisis is most frequently viewed through the lens
of science, policy, law, and economics. In recent years the moral and
spiritual dimensions of this crisis are becoming more visible. Indeed,
world religions are bringing their texts and traditions, along with
their ethics and practices, into dialogue with environmental prob-
lems. In a lecture delivered at the University of Utah, Tucker explores
this growing movement and highlights why it holds great promise
for long term changes for the flourishing of the Earth community.
Mary Evelyn Tucker delivered this lecture on April 11, 2013, at
the 18th annual symposium sponsored by the Wallace Stegner Cen-
ter for Land, Resources and the Environment at the S. J. Quinney Col-
lege of Law, The University of Utah.
MARCH 201420 pp., 5½ x 8 ½
PAPER 978-1-60781-357-6 $4.95
MARY EVELYN TUCKER is a senior lecturer and research scholar at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies and the Yale Divinity School. With her husband, John Grim, she directs the Forum on Religion and Ecology, which brings religious communities into dialogue with our pressing environmental concerns.
2011 LECTURE
Little Fish in a Pork BarrelZygmunt J. B. Plater
28 pp., 5 ½ x 8 ½PAPER 978-1-60781-190-9 $4.95
2010 CLOSING KEYNOTE LECTURE
Dance, Don’t DriveChip Ward
24 pp., 5 ½ x 8 ½PAPER 978-1-60781-191-6 $4.95
2010 LECTURE
Ownership, Property, and SustainabilityJoseph Sax
20 pp., 5 ½ x 8 ½PAPER 978-1-60781-139-8 $4.95
2009 LECTURE
The Fourth WestCharles Wilkinson
20 pp., 5 ½ x 8 ½ PAPER 978-1-60781-025-4 $4.95
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WINNER OF THE AGHA SHAHID ALI POETRY PRIZE IN 2013
SpectatorKara Candito
Kara Candito’s second poetry collection is anything but a comedy,
although it ends happily. At the book’s center is the struggle of a U.S.
citizen and a Mexican citizen to find a common space and language
in their relationship while navigating the U.S. immigration system, a
process that sometimes requires magical thinking just to endure. By
employing a kind of documentary poetics that views the application
process through different angles and perspectives, Candito crafts
discourses around xenophobia, otherness, and national and ethnic
identity.
“In the waiting room of the third government office, / you will
invent your own religion,” writes Candito in “Ars Amatoria: So You
Want to Marry a Foreign National,” a tragicomic sequence written in
Roman-numeric fragments reminiscent of an official document’s for-
matting. Interspersed with moments of lyric urgency (“I am here / to
learn how to suffer more beautifully”) and disconcerting cinematic
observation (“One wore an assault rifle across his back, // another
pointed a video camera at our faces.”), Spectator charts the plural
self’s course through a world of airplane travel, drug wars, and cus-
toms forms.
From Italy to Boston, from Lorca’s Granada to New York City, and
from the dusty streets of Mexico City to the snowy parking lots of
the Midwest, the speakers of Spectator probe the jagged boundaries
between past and present, observer and observed, and political and
personal. The book becomes an homage to anyone who’s been dis-
placed or redefined by bureaucratic systems of power.
“The fluidity of the writing, the lift of the heart, the self- deprecating
humor, and the aggregate of the understated losses add up to, in
Kara Candito’s second collection, a kind of brilliance and readability
all too rare. These new poems are alive with the personality and
honesty of a young poet at the beginning of true art.”—Stanley Plumly
“Spectator has a subversive heart: a series of poems about a
Mexican and an American in love. These ravenous poems cross
many emotional and aesthetic borders. They’re surreal, tender,
meta, political, impressionistic, and angry. Kara Candito has
enlarged the contemporary love poem. This is vital and startling
work.”—Eduardo Corral
FROM Spectator
Initiation #5: LorcaHe is standing at the foot of my bed
with an insanely tragic smile and a syringe
full of lead. He is sitting beside me
in a bloodless body, stroking the pink sheets
with eyes like a fruit that’s never in season.
Burning casinos and countries I’ll never visit
pass over the room. I am here
to learn how to suffer more beautifully.
Outside, at the bus stop, thin men in scrubs
read about nanobots, and maybe they can map
the malignant cells unspooling in my marrow,
or the best, fastest path of a bullet entering the
chest.
Inside, in another dimension, we are riding
two lame mares to the pasture where I am
ravaged by centaur after centaur, never a
satyr.
Bodies matter, how they break open,
which animals we let inside us. I am here
to learn how to suffer more beautifully,
to smile for the white air and give everything
away.
KARA CANDITO is a creative writing professor at the University of Wisconsin, Platteville, and a co-curator of the Monsters of Poetry reading series in Madison, Wisconsin. She is the recipient of schol-arships and awards from the Bread Loaf Writ-ers’ Conference, the Council for Wisconsin Writers, the Vermont Studio Center, the MacDowell Col-ony, and the Santa Fe Arts Institute. Her work has been published in numerous journals and her first poetry collection, Taste of Cherry, won the Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Poetry.
POETRY
APRIL 2014 80 pp., 5½ x 8½
PAPER 978-1-60781-351-4 $12.95
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KUEDBYU MUSEUM OF PEOPLES AND CULTURES
A Report of Archaeological Excavations at Antelope Cave and Rock Canyon Shelter, Northwestern Arizona
Occasional Papers No. 19
Joel C. Janetski, Deborah A. Newman, and James D. Wilde
The Arizona Strip of northwestern Arizona lies on the
western frontier of the Ancestral Puebloan world, a
region whose pre-European history remains poorly
known. This volume reports on modest testing of two
dry stratified sites on the Strip: Antelope Cave and Rock
Canyon Shelter. The testing was done in the 1980s by
Brigham Young University under contract with the
BLM. In addition to detailed descriptions of the mate-
rials recovered during the testing at each site, the vol-
ume includes the material recovered by Robert Euler
from Antelope Cave in the 1950s. The testing documents
late Archaic use of both sites. In addition, the report
contains analysis results on the massive macrobotan-
ical remains by Deborah Newman and Gloria Judges
Edwards as well as a chapter detailing Puebloan sandal
constructions by David Yoder.
ARCHAEOLOGY/ANTHROPOLOGY
AVAILABLE296 pp., 8 ½ x 11
52 figuresPAPER 978-0-9855198-2-7 $24.00
Return of the Wolves
The Next Chapter
Narrated by Peter Coyote
It’s been almost twenty years since wolves were rein-
troduced into Yellowstone National Park and placed
on the endangered species list. At the time, advo-
cates said wolves were a vital link in the natural eco-
system. Returning the park’s premier natural predator
would help control Yellowstone’s surplus elk and bison
population.
Worried about the effect of wolves on their liveli-
hoods, ranchers and hunters protested the reintroduc-
tion, and some filed lawsuits. The discussion became
heated to the point of threatened violence.
Jump ahead to 2013, when the West has seen a
resurgence of wolves and their fate has again become
the center of a growing controversy. The U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service is proposing that wolves—except for
the Mexican wolves of the Southwest—be delisted
nationwide as an endangered species and that their
management be handled at a state level. Montana,
Idaho, and Wyoming have already delisted wolves and
implemented hunting seasons.
Return of the Wolves explores both sides of the
heated issue and examines the role of the wolf in
Yellowstone, the West, and the Southwest.
AVAILABLE
57 minutesDVD 978-1-60781-360-6 $19.95
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California’s Channel Islands
The Archaeology of Human-Environment Interactions
Edited by Christopher S. Jazwa and Jennifer E. Perry
California’s Channel Islands are a chain of eight islands
that extend along the state’s southern coastline from
Santa Barbara’s Point Conception to the Mexican bor-
der. Popular tourist destinations today, these islands
once supported some of the earliest human popula-
tions in the Americas; archaeological evidence of mar-
itime Paleoindian settlements on the northern islands
dates back some 13,000 years. California’s Channel
Islands presents a definitive archaeological investigation
of these unique islands and their inhabitants, and is the
first publication to discuss the islands and their peoples
holistically rather than individually or by subgroup.
This compendium of scholarship condenses
decades of excavation and analysis into a single, illumi-
nating volume that will be indispensable for those inter-
ested in the Channel Islands or New World history or
archaeology.
ANTHROPOLOGY / ARCHAEOLOGY
APRIL 2014214 pp., 7 x 10
24 b/w illus., 19 maps, 20 tablesPAPER 978-1-60781-308-8 $40.00s
EBOOK 978-1-60781-272-2
Children in the Prehistoric Puebloan Southwest
Edited by Kathryn A. Kamp
Children are rarely mentioned in archaeological studies.
Some say this omission is unavoidable because there
is little evidence of their presence. “Subadults” can be
distinguished only when there is osteological confir-
mation. Others suggest that the reason children don’t
exist in prehistory is because no one has truly looked
for them, much as no one had looked for women in the
same context until recently.
In this volume, contributors attempt to find some
of the children who lived in the pueblos of the prehis-
toric Southwest, or at least show how they might be
found. They address two issues: What was life like for
these children and what was the cultural construction
of their childhood?
Determining how cultures with written records have
constructed childhood in the past is hard enough, but
the difficulty is magnified in the case of ancient Puebloan
societies. The contributors here offer approaches from
careful analysis of artifacts and skeletal remains to ethno-
graphic evidence in rock art. Topics include cradleboards,
evidence of child labor, ceramics that may have been
produced by children, and osteological evidence of chil-
dren’s health conditions.
ANTHROPOLOGY / ARCHAEOLOGY
APRIL 2014256 pp., 6 x 9
43 figures, 29 tablesPAPER 978-1-60781-361-3 $20.00s
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BACKLIST A
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25th Street Confidential
Drama, Decadence, and Dissipation along Ogden’s Rowdiest Road
Val Holley
Generations of Ogdenites have
grown up absorbing 25th Street’s
legends of corruption, menace,
and depravity. The rest of Utah has
tended to judge Ogden—known
in its first century as a gambling
hell and tenderloin, and in recent
years as a degraded skid row—by
the street’s gaudy reputation. Pres-
ent-day Ogden embraces the after-
glow of 25th Street’s decadence and
successfully promotes it to tourists.
In the same preservationist spirit
as Denver’s Larimer Square, today’s
25th Street is home to art galleries,
fine dining, live theater, street festi-
vals, mixed-use condominiums, and
the Utah State Railroad Museum.
240 pp., 9 x 9, 108 b/w illus.
PAPER 978-1-60781-269-2 $24.95
CLOTH 978-1-60781-268-5 $44.95
EBOOK 978-1-60781-270-8
WINNER OF THE WALLACE STEGNER PRIZE
Roads in the Wilderness
Conflict in Canyon Country
Jedediah S. Rogers
The canyon country of south-
ern Utah and northern Arizona is
a region hotly contested among
vying and disparate interests, from
industrial developers to wilderness
preservation advocates. Roads are
central to the conflicts raging in a
place perceived as one of the last
large roadless areas in the conti-
nental United States. The canyon
country contains an extensive net-
work of dirt trails and roads, but
well-groomed and paved roads
have come to signify the industrial-
ization of the modern age. Of inter-
est to environmentalists, historians,
and those who live in the Ameri-
can West, this book will challenge
how readers think about the can-
yon country and the stories embed-
ded in the land.
250 pp., 6 x 9, 24 photos, 6 mapsCLOTH 978-1-60781-311-8 $39.95
PAPER 978-1-60781-313-2 $24.95
EBOOK 978-1-60781-312-5
Canyon of Dreams
Stories from Grand Canyon History
Don Lago
The Grand Canyon—long recog-
nized as North America’s premier
natural wonder—has stirred human
imagination and creativity, leaving
an indelible mark on all who have
encountered its spectacular vistas
and intricate landscapes. This eclec-
tic compilation runs the gamut
from the idiosyncratic to the land-
mark, the mythical to the empir-
ical, and everything in between.
The narratives are captivating and
sure to appeal to readers interested
in the Grand Canyon’s long and
complex history. The work is thor-
oughly researched and will prove
a valuable contribution to histori-
cal scholarship. Canyon of Dreams
sheds light on many obscure
aspects of the canyon and takes
readers on rollicking adventures in
the process.
336 pp., 6 x 922 b/w illus.
PAPER 978-1-60781-314-9 $19.95
EBOOK 978-1-60781-315-6
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UNIVERSITY OF UTAH ANTHROPOLOGICAL PAPERS #127
The Prehistory of Gold Butte
A Virgin River Hinterland, Clarke County, Nevada
Kelly McGuire, William Hildebrandt, Amy Gilreath, Jerome King, and John Berg
A major archaeological exam-
ination of the ebb and flow of
human occupation in southeastern
Nevada.
“Clearly significant. It’s a large, well-
reported, and very well synthesized
project that many people in both
CRM and academic circles have
heard of and now have the oppor-
tunity to learn a lot more about.”
—Christopher Morgan, University of Nevada, Reno
288 pp., 8 ½ x 1174 b/w illus., 16 color illus.,
16 maps, 100 tablesPAPER 978-1-60781-305-7 $50.00
EBOOK 978-1-60781-306-4
Archaeology in the Great Basin and Southwest
Papers in Honor of Don D. Fowler
Edited by Nancy J. Parezo and Joel C. Janetski
An extensive overview of the past,
present, and future of archaeology
in the Great Basin and Southwest.
“A significant contribution. This
is the only volume that I know of
that presents up-to-date analyses,
discussion, and syntheses of the
archaeology of the Great Basin and
the Southwest in one place.”
—Barbara J. Mills, University of Arizona
360 pp., 8 ½ x 1176 b/w illus., 33 maps, 19 tablesCLOTH 978-1-60781-282-1 $75.00
PAPER 978-1-60781-307-1 $50.00
FULL TEXT EBOOK 978-1-60781-283-8
PART 2 EBOOK 978-1-60781-309-5
Case Studies and Regional Syntheses
PART 3 EBOOK 978-1-60781-310-1
Specialty Studies in Social and Historical Contexts
CHOICE OUTSTANDING ACADEMIC TITLE 2014
Nine Mile Canyon
The Archaeological History of an American Treasure
Jerry D. Spangler
With an estimated 10,000 ancient
rock art sites, Nine Mile Canyon
has long captivated people the
world over. The 45-mile-long can-
yon, dubbed the “World’s Longest
Art Gallery,” hosts what is believed
to be the largest concentration of
rock art in North America. Through
the words and thoughts of archae-
ologists, as well as more than 150
photos, readers will come to see
the canyon as an American treasure
unlike any other. As the first book
that is devoted exclusively to the
archaeology of this unique place,
Nine Mile Canyon will be fascinating
reading for scholars and the gen-
eral public alike.
280 pp., 8 ½ x 10116 color photos, 52 b/w illus., 4 maps
PAPER 978-1-60781-226-5 $34.95
EBOOK 978-1-60781-228-9
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The First Rocky Mountaineers
Coloradans before Colorado
Marcel Kornfeld
The first inhabitants of the Rocky
Mountain high country left a rich
record of shelters, tools, and projec-
tile points as well as food residues
in the form of bison bones, all dat-
ing between 12,000 and 9000 years
ago. This record provides a robust
database for interpreting their life-
ways and unique adaptations. Korn-
feld offers the first treatment of
the original Middle Park and Rocky
Mountain human populations
from a biocultural perspective. This
approach suggests that both bio-
logical and cultural processes frame
the outcome of a successful human
adaptation. While such a process
may be resisted by some anthropol-
ogists investigating low-elevation
groups, it is unavoidable when try-
ing to understand the dynamics of
those living in the high country.
336 pp., 7 x 1054 b/w illus., 85 line drawings,
8 maps, 34 tablesCLOTH 978-1-60781-262-3 $65.00
EBOOK 978-1-60781-263-0
From Mountain Top to Valley Bottom
Understanding Past Land Use in the Northern Rio Grande Valley, New Mexico
Edited by Bradley J. Vierra
The American Southwest is charac-
terized by environmentally and cul-
turally diverse landscapes, which
include the northern Rio Grande
valley as it cuts through north-cen-
tral New Mexico from Taos to Albu-
querque. Although the region has
a long and rich history of anthropo-
logical research, only recently has
work involving large-scale surveys
and excavations been conducted on
the nearby mesas and mountains
that form the rugged margins of the
river valley. From Mountain Top to
Valley Bottom incorporates this new
research into a perspective that links
the ever-changing and complemen-
tary nature of lowland and upland
land use.
336 pp., 7 x 10 43 b/w illus., 19 maps, 21 tables
CLOTH 978-1-60781-266-1 $60.00S
EBOOK 978-1-60781-267-8
Ground Stone Analysis
A Technological Approach, Second Edition
Jenny L. Adams
The first edition of Ground Stone
Analysis sparked interest around
the world. In the decade follow-
ing its publication, there have been
many advances in scientific tech-
nology and developments in ethno-
graphic and experimental research.
The second edition incorporates
these advances, including refer-
ences to examples of international
research that have utilized a tech-
nological approach to their ground
stone analyses. This study contin-
ues to present a flexible yet struc-
tured method for analyzing stone
artifacts and classifying them into
meaningful categories. The analysis
techniques record important attri-
butes based on design, manufac-
turing, and use and are applicable
to any collection in the world.
336 pp., 6 x 976 illus., 14 tables, 1 map
PAPER 978-1-60781-273-9 $40.00S
EBOOK 978-1-60781-274-6
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Dinosaurs of UtahSecond Edition
Frank DeCourten
978-1-60781-265-4(E)978-1-60781-264-7PAPER $34.95
Saints ObservedStudies of Mormon Village Life, 1850–2005
Howard M. Bahr
978-1-60781-321-7(E)978-1-60781-320-0CLOTH $37.95
Lost in the YellowstoneTruman Everts’s “Thirty-seven Days of Peril”
Edited by Lee H. Whittlesey978-0-87480-481-2PAPER $14.95
Five Old Men of YellowstoneThe Rise of Interpretation in the First National Park
Stephen G. Biddulph978-1-60781-247-0 (E) 978-1-60781-257-9CLOTH $39.95978-1-60781-246-3PAPER $24.95
Four Classic Mor-mon Village StudiesEdited by Howard M. Bahr
978-1-60781-323-1(E)978-1-60781-322-4CLOTH $40.00S
John MuirTo Yosemite and Beyond
Edited by Robert Engberg and Donald Wesling978-0-87480-580-2PAPER $14.95
A Frontier LifeJacob Hamblin, Explorer and Indian Missionary
Todd M. Compton
978-1-60781-235-7(E)978-1-60781-234-0CLOTH $44.95
Tony Hillerman’s Navajoland Hideouts, Haunts, and Havens in the Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee MysteriesExpanded Third Edition
Laurance D. Linford978-1-60781-137-4PAPER $21.95
Final LightThe Life and Art of V. Douglas Snow
Edited by Frank McEntire
978-1-60781-253-1(E)978-1-60781-252-4CLOTH $26.95
Opening ZionA Scrapbook of the National Park’s First Official Tourists
John Clark and Melissa Clark978-1-60781-006-3PAPER $19.95
Canyoneering the Northern San Rafael SwellSteve Allen and Joe Mitchell
978-1-60781-239-5(E)978-1-60781-238-8PAPER $19.95
Canyoneering 3Loop Hikes in Utah’s Escalante
Steve Allen
978-0-87480-545-1PAPER $21.95
A Natural History of the Intermountain WestIts Ecological and Evolutionary Story
Gwendolyn L. Waring978-1-60781-980-6 (E)978-1-60781-028-5PAPER $29.95
The Bitterroot and Mr. BrandborgClearcutting and the Struggle for Sustainable Forestry in the Northern Rockies
Frederick H. Swanson
978-1-60781-990-5(E)978-1-60781-101-5CLOTH $39.95
Dave RustA Life in the Canyons
Frederick H. SwansonForeword by Michael F. Anderson
978-1-60781-295-1(E)978-0-87480-944-2PAPER $19.95
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Life’s Journey–ZuyaOral Teachings from Rosebud
Albert White Hat Sr.Compiled and edited by John Cunningham
978-1-60781-216-6(E)978-1-60781-184-8PAPER $24.95
Navajo Tradition, Mormon LifeThe Autobiography and Teachings of Jim Dandy
Robert S. McPherson, Jim Dandy, and Sarah E. Burak
978-1-60781-222-7(E)978-1-60781-194-7PAPER $27.95
As If the Land Owned UsAn Ethnohistory of the White Mesa Utes
Robert S. McPherson
978-1-60781-201-2(E)978-1-60781-145-9PAPER $29.95
Forced to Abandon Our FieldsThe 1914 Clay Southworth Gila River Pima Interviews
David H. DeJong
978-1-60781-982-0(E)978-1-60781-095-7PAPER $34.95
Two Toms Lessons from a Shoshone Doctor
Thomas H. Johnson and Helen S. Johnson
978-1-60781-986-8(E)978-1-60781-090-2PAPER $15.95
Sherman AlexieA Collection of Critical Essays
Edited by Jeff Berglund and Jan Roush
978-1-60781-974-5(E)978-1-60781-008-7PAPER $24.95
Mountain SpiritThe Sheep Eater Indians of Yellowstone
Lawrence L. Loendorf and Nancy Medaris Stone
978-0-87480-867-4PAPER $19.95
Northern Paiute–Bannock DictionaryCompiled by Sven Liljeblad, Catherine S. Fowler, and Glenda Powell
978-1-60781-968-4(E)978-1-60781-030-8CLOTH $100.00S
Ute TalesCollected by Anne M. Smith
978-0-87480-442-3PAPER $19.95
Shoshone TalesCollected and edited by Anne M. Smith, assisted by Alden Hayes978-0-87480-570-3 PAPER $19.95
Home WatersA Year of Recompenses on the Provo River
George B. Handley
978-1-60781-967-7(E)978-1-60781-023-0PAPER $24.95
The Way HomeEssays on the Outside West
James McVey
978-1-60781-969-1(E)978-1-60781-033-9PAPER $19.95
WildbranchAn Anthology of Nature, Environmental, and Place-based Writing
Edited by Florence Caplow and Susan A. Cohen
978-1-60781-124-4PAPER $17.95
Seven SummersA Naturalist Homesteads in the Modern West
Julia Corbett
978-1-60781-250-0 (E)978-1-60781-249-4PAPER $19.95
Gravity HillA Memoir
Maximillian Werner
978-1-60781-243-2 (E)978-1-60781-242-5PAPER $15.95
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A Traveler’s Guide to the Geology of the Colorado PlateauDonald L. Baars
978-1-60781-288-3(E)978-0-87480-715-8PAPER $25.00
The Geology of the Parks, Monuments, and Wildlands of Southern UtahRobert Fillmore
978-0-87480-652-6PAPER $21.95
Geological Evolution of the Colorado Plateau of Eastern Utah and Western ColoradoRobert Fillmore
978-1-60781-983-7(E)978-1-60781-004-9PAPER $29.95
Ghosts of Glen CanyonHistory beneath Lake PowellRevised Edition
C. Gregory CramptonForeword by Edward Abbey
978-0-87480-946-6PAPER $29.95
Lost Canyons of the Green RiverThe Story before Flaming Gorge Dam
Roy Webb
978-1-60781-214-2(E)978-1-60781-179-4PAPER $21.95
Last of the Robbers Roost OutlawsMoab’s Bill TibbettsTom McCourt
978-0-937407-15-8PAPER $14.99
A Hole in the Ground with a Liar at the TopFraud and Deceit in the Golden Age of American Mining
Dan Plazak
978-1-60781-020-9PAPER $24.95
Black Pioneers Images of the Black Experience on the North American FrontierSecond Edition
John W. RavageForeword by Quintard Taylor
978-0-87480-941-1PAPER $22.95
House of MourningA Biocultural History of the Mountain Meadows Massacre
Shannon A. Novak
978-1-60781-169-5PAPER $14.95
On the Way to Somewhere ElseEuropean Sojourners in the Mormon West, 1834–1930
Edited by Michael W. Homer
978-0-87480-994-7 PAPER $24.95
Cleaving an Unknown WorldThe Powell Expeditions and the Scientific Exploration of the Colorado Plateau
Edited by Don D. FowlerForeword by Roy Webb
978-1-60781-146-6 PAPER $24.95
Diary of Almon Harris ThompsonExplorations of the Colorado River of the West and Its Tributaries, 1871–1875
Edited by Herbert E. Gregory
978-0-87480-962-6PAPER $14.95
The Exploration of the Colorado River . . . Second Pow-ell Expedition of 1871–1872Edited by Herbert E. Gregory, William Culp Darrah, and Charles Kelly
978-0-87480-964-0PAPER $24.95
The Exploration of the Colorado River in 1869 and 1871–1872Edited by William Culp Darrah, Ralph V. Chamberlin, and Charles Kelly
978-0-87480-963-3PAPER $19.95
The Domínguez-Escalante JournalTheir Expedition through Colorado, Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico in 1776
Edited by Ted J. WarnerTranslated by Fray Angelico Chavez
978-1-60781-294-4(E)978-0-87480-448-5 PAPER $14.95
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Troubled TrailsThe Meeker Affair and the Expulsion of Utes from Colorado
Robert SilbernagelForeword by Floyd A. O’Neil
978-1-60781-995-0(E)978-1-60781-129-9PAPER $24.95
Plain but WholesomeFoodways of the Mormon Pioneers
Brock Cheney
978-1-60781-209-8 (E)978-1-60781-208-1 PAPER $19.95
At Rest in Zion, OP #14The Archaeology of Salt Lake City’s First Pioneer Cemetery
Shane A. Baker
978-0-9753945-5-7 PAPER $25.00
Nels Anderson’s World War I DiaryAllan K. Powell
978-1-60781-256-2 (E)978-1-60781-255-5 CLOTH $34.95
Glory HunterA Biography of Patrick Edward Connor
Brigham D. Madsen
978-1-60781-154-1PAPER $21.95
Shifting Borders and a Tattered PassportIntellectual Journeys of a Mormon Academic
Armand L. MaussForeword by Richard L. Bushman
978-1-60781-225-8(E)978-1-60781-204-3CLOTH $25.00S
Juanita BrooksThe Life Story of a Courageous Historian of the Mountain Meadows Massacre
Levi S. Peterson
978-1-60781-151-0PAPER $24.95
David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern MormonismGregory A. Prince and Wm. Robert Wright
978-1-60781-300-2(E)978-0-87480-822-3CLOTH $29.95
To the Peripheries of MormondomThe Apostolic Around-the-World Journey of David O. McKay, 1920–1921
Hugh J. CannonEdited by Reid L. Neilson
978-1-60781-010-0CLOTH $29.95
Early Mormon Missionary Ac-tivities in Japan, 1901–1924Reid L. Neilson
978-0-87480-989-3PAPER $29.95
Henry Burkhardt and LDS Realpolitik in Communist East GermanyRaymond Kuehne
978-1-60781-211-1(E)978-1-60781-149-7PAPER $26.95
Mormons as Citizens of a Communist StateA Documentary History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in East Germany, 1945–1990
Raymond Kuehne
978-0-87480-993-0PAPER $39.95
Amasa Mason Lyman, Mormon Apostle and ApostateA Study in Dedication
Edward Leo Lyman
978-0-87480-940-4CLOTH $39.95
Camp Floyd and the MormonsThe Utah War
Donald R. Moorman with Gene A. Sessions
978-0-87480-845-2PAPER $22.95
The Lady in the Ore BucketA History of Settlement and Industry in the Tri-Canyon Area of the Wasatch Mountains
Charles L. Keller
978-1-60781-804-5(E)978-1-60781-021-6PAPER $29.95
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War and NationalismThe Balkan Wars, 1912–1913, and Their Sociopolitical Implications
Edited by M. Hakan Yavuz and Isa Blumi
978-1-60781-241-8(E)978-1-60781-240-1CLOTH $48.00S
War and DiplomacyThe Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878 and the Treaty of Berlin
Edited by M. Hakan Yavuzwith Peter Sluglett
978-1-60781-185-5(E)978-1-60781-150-3CLOTH $40.00S
The Turk in AmericaThe Creation of an Enduring Prejudice
Justin McCarthy
978-1-60781-966-0(E)978-1-60781-013-1PAPER $39.95S
Symbiotic AntagonismsCompeting Nationalisms in Turkey
Edited by Ayşe Kadıoğlu and E. Fuat Keyman
978-1-60781-979-0(E)978-1-60781-031-5PAPER $40.00S
ʿUlamaʾ, Politics, and the Public SphereAn Egyptian Perspective
Meir Hatina
978-1-60781-977-6(E)978-1-60781-032-2PAPER $25.00S
Turkish Foreign Policy, 1919–2006Facts and Analyses with Documents
Edited by Baskın Oran Translated by Mustafa Akşin
978-1-60781-965-3(E)978-0-87480-904-6CLOTH $100.00S
The Search for God’s LawIslamic Jurisprudence in the Writings of Sayf al-Dīn al-Āmidī Revised Edition
Bernard G. Weiss
978-1-60781-971-4(E)978-0-87480-938-1CLOTH $75.00S
Reza Ali Khazeni Memorial Lectures in Iranian StudiesVolume One, The Gift of Persian Culture: Its Continuity and Influence in History
Edited by Peter J. Chelkowski
978-1-60781-037-7CLOTH $35.00S
Reza Ali Khazeni Memorial Lectures in Iranian StudiesVolume Two, Crafting the Intangible: Persian Literature and Mysticism
Edited by Peter J. Chelkowski
978-1-60781-280-7CLOTH $35.00S
American Missionaries and the Middle EastFoundational Encounters
Edited by Mehmet Ali Doğan and Heather J. Sharkey
978-1-60781-976-9(E)978-1-60781-038-4PAPER $50.00S
Laboratory for AnthropologyScience and Romanticism in the American Southwest, 1846-1930
Don FowlerForeword by Brian Fagan
978-1-60781-035-3PAPER $34.95
Chaco HandbookAn Encyclopedia GuideSecond Edition
R. Gwinn Vivian and Bruce Hilpert
978-1-60781-195-4PAPER $19.95
In the Eastern Fluted Point TraditionEdited by Joseph A. M. Gingerich
978-1-60781-233-3(E)978-1-60781-170-1CLOTH $65.00S
Kinship SystemsChange and Reconstruction
Edited by Patrick McConvell, Ian Keen, and Rachel Hendery
978-1-60781-245-6(E)978-1-60781-244-9CLOTH $70.00S
Paleoindian Lifeways of the Cody ComplexEdited by Edward J. Knell and Mark P. Muñiz
978-1-60781-230-2(E)978-1-60781-229-6CLOTH $60.00S
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Becoming White ClayA History and Archaeology of Jicarilla Apache Enclavement
B. Sunday Eiselt
978-1-60781-202-9(E)978-1-60781-193-0CLOTH $45.00S
Field SeasonsReflections on Career Paths and Research in American Archaeology
Anna Marie Prentiss
978-1-60781-221-0(E)978-1-60781-220-3PAPER $25.00S
Power and Identity in Archaeological Theory and PracticeCase Studies from Ancient Mesoamerica
Edited by Eleanor Harrison-Buck
978-1-60781-217-3(E)978-1-60781-174-9PAPER $35.00S
Studying Technological ChangeA Behavioral Approach
Michael Brian Schiffer
978-1-60781-989-9(E)978-1-60781-136-7PAPER $45.00S
Traces of FremontSociety and Rock Art in Ancient Utah
Text by Steven R. SimmsPhotographs by François Gohier
978-1-60781-011-7PAPER $24.95
The Rock Art of UtahPolly Schaafsma
978-0-87480-435-5PAPER $22.95
Meetings at the MarginsPrehistoric Cultural Interactions in the Intermountain West
Edited by David Rhode
978-1-60781-993-6(E)978-1-60781-173-2CLOTH $60.00S
From the Land of Ever Winter to the American SouthwestAthapaskan Migrations, Mobility, and Ethnogenesis
Edited by Deni J. Seymour
978-1-60781-994-3(E)978-1-60781-175-6CLOTH $70.00S
Where the Earth and Sky Are Sewn TogetherSobaipuri-O’odham Contexts of Contact and Colonialism
Deni J. Seymour
978-1-60781-213-5(E)978-1-60781-067-4CLOTH $60.00S
Foragers and Farmers of the Northern Kayenta RegionExcavations along the Navajo Mountain Road
Phil R. Geib
978-1-60781-999-8(E)978-1-60781-003-2CLOTH $70.00S
Winds from the NorthTewa Origins and Historical Anthropology
Scott G. Ortman
978-1-60781-992-9(E)978-1-60781-172-5CLOTH $70.00S
Least Cost Analysis of Social LandscapesArchaeological Case Studies
Edited by Devin A. White and Sarah L. Surface-Evans
978-1-60781-199-2(E)978-1-60781-171-8CLOTH $55.00S
Perspectives on Prehistoric Trade and Exchange in California and the Great BasinEdited by Richard E. Hughes
978-1-60781-200-5(E)978-1-60781-152-7CLOTH $50.00S
Island of FogsArchaeological and Ethno historical Investigations of Isla Cedros, Baja California
Matthew R. Des Lauriers
978-1-60781-970-7(E)978-1-60781-007-0CLOTH $60.00S
Modern Oceans, Ancient SitesArchaeology and Marine Conservation on San Miguel Island, California
Todd J. Braje
978-1-60781-955-4(E)978-0-87480-984-8CLOTH $50.00S
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The Glen Canyon CountryA Personal Memoir
Don D. FowlerForeword by W. L. “Bud” Rusho
978-1-60781-985-1(E)978-1-60781-127-5CLOTH $75.00S978-1-60781-134-3PAPER $39.95
A White-Bearded PlainsmanThe Memoirs of Archaeologist W. Raymond Wood
W. Raymond Wood
978-1-60781-991-2(E)978-1-60781-130-5CLOTH $49.95S
People of the WaterChange and Continuity among the Uru-Chipayans of Bolivia
Joseph W. Bastien
978-1-60781-219-7(E)978-1-60781-148-0CLOTH $40.00S
Essays on Genocide and Humanitarian InterventionGuenter Lewy
978-1-60781-187-9(E)978-1-60781-168-8PAPER $25.00
Primate PeopleSaving Nonhuman Primates through Education, Advocacy, and Sanctuary
Edited by Lisa KemmererForeword by Marc Bekoff
978-1-60781-215-9(E)978-1-60781-153-4PAPER $24.95
The Guardian PoplarA Memoir of Deep Roots, Journey, and Rediscovery
Chase Nebeker PetersonForeword by Cornel West
978-1-60781-998-1(E)978-1-60781-182-4CLOTH $39.95
Dance with the BearThe Joe Rosenblatt Story
Norman RosenblattForeword by Robert A. Goldberg
978-1-60781-237-1(E)978-1-60781-236-4CLOTH $44.95
Copublished with the Poetry FoundationBlueprintsBringing Poetry into Communities
Edited by Katharine Coles
978-1-60781-981-3(E)978-1-60781-147-3PAPER $8.95
Scrap IronMark J. Brewin
978-1-60781-259-3 (E)978-1-60781-258-6PAPER $12.95
Night RadioKim Young
978-1-60781-206-7(E)978-1-60781-205-0PAPER $12.95
Charlotte’s RoseA. E. Cannon
978-1-60781-141-1PAPER $9.95
Shrinking JungleKevin T. Jones
978-1-60781-197-8 (E)978-1-60781-196-1PAPER $15.00
INTRODUCTION AND INDICES978-1-60781-156-5PAPER $35.00978-0-87480-165-1CLOTH $54.50S
BOOK 1: The Gods978-1-60781-157-2PAPER $30.00
BOOK 2: The Ceremonies978-1-60781-158-9PAPER $45.00
BOOK 3: The Origin of the Gods978-1-60781-159-6PAPER $30.00978-0-87480-002-9CLOTH $44.50S
BOOKS 4 AND 5: The Soothsayers and The Omens978-1-60781-160-2PAPER $45.00
978-0-87480-003-6CLOTH $54.50S
BOOK 6: Rhetoric and Moral Philosophy978-1-60781-161-9PAPER $45.00978-0-87480-010-4CLOTH $54.50S
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Complete 12-Volume set978-1-60781-192-3PAPER $450.00
Florentine Codex: General History of the Things of New SpainBernardino de Sahagún, Translated from the Nahuatl with notes by Arthur J. O. Anderson and Charles E. Dibble
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