Reviews
The Boy Who Promised Me Horses
Review in Big Sky Journal:
“As much a personal quest to find himself as a haunting portrait of Prairie Chief’s too-short life—in all its joy and tragedy, pain and hope, freedom and sorrow—The Boy Who Promised Me Horses is a testament to the power of friendship and the ability of a chance encounter to change a life forever.”
Jagadakeer: Apology to the Body
Review in EVN Reporter:
“Bedikian pulls no punches—she rages with and against death, whether in the form of a dead tooth or a dead parent. And everything recalls the admonition from the book of the Common Prayer that all things eventually dissolve into nothingness: ‘Earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust.'”
Review in Washington Independent Review of Books:
“The book is cleverly structured for both the casual reader and the serious scholar. A tantalizing preface is followed by a dramatis personae offering a reminder of who’s who. The prologue guides the reader into the main narrative, and a helpful chronology at the end revisits the complex events, dates, and players. Last is a glossary that provides a quick, useful Yiddish lesson on the terms featured in the text.”
Review in Reader Views Book Reviews:
“There is much to be learned about the plight of Jews in America and Scott D. Seligman has handed the masses a resource for further understanding. The Chief Rabbi’s Funeral is a book for fans of history as well as the reader who desires for America to truly be a place of morality and love for all people.”
Review in Big Sky Journal:
“Readers of this collection will have a hard time shaking the image of Antillia from the horizon of their thoughts, and they will be grateful for the haunting.”
The Education of Clarence Three Stars
Review in Roundup Magazine:
“Burnham . . . has written another moving biography that tells the stories often overlooked or ignored, from treatment of Natives in asylum—one of Three Star’s daughters was committed to one—to the stealing of the Black Hills by white America.”
Review in Roundup Magazine:
“The Nebraska Sandhills are remote, vast, haunting and filled with Western history. This impressive publication sets out to tell the whole story of the region. It’s an ambitious undertaking, enlisting the talents of multiple writers, photographers, editors and historians.”
Review in Roundup Magazine:
“Charlotte Hinger is a master storyteller. She writes about big-hearted people with tenderness, grit and love. Powerful, touching and real, Mary’s Place is a deeply woven understanding of the human spirit, its strength and its will to survive.”
Review in Roundup Magazine:
“I was moved to tears, as well as impressed with the vivid portrayal of Wyoming winter. I heartily recommend The Scent of Distant Family.“







