News & Reviews

Reviews

Too Good to Be Altogether Lost

Review in The Wall Street Journal:

“Ms. Hill not only discusses the woman’s life, artistry and place in American literature. She also solves a literary mystery that has long bedeviled Wilder’s legacy—and millions of her readers.”

If I Can Get Home This Fall

Starred Review in Library Journal:

“The subject is compelling and valuable, especially for readers interested in American history, the Civil War, or personal stories of courage and resilience.”

Thank You for Staying with Me

Review in Rain Taxi:

“One could visualize Thank You for Staying with Me in the shape of a seashell, too, moving simultaneously toward and away from a center while Moore transforms the gaps in her memory from nodes of panic to active spaces of re-creation.”

Swallowing a World

Review in Studies in the Novel:

Swallowing a World is smart, well-researched, and timely; it engages with important authors, texts, and issues in intelligent and illuminating ways.”

Mud, Blood, and Ghosts

Review in Rocky Mountain Reader:

Mud, Blood, and Ghosts is an educated and educational view of the history of white, male supremacy, westward expansion, and their ripples in the United States.”

Basketball Beyond Paper

Review in Global Sports Business Journal:

“Makes a meaningful contribution to sport scholarship by expanding what has generally been thought of in regards to performance analytics.”

When We Only Have The Earth

Review in The Revelator:

“A short but moving book, full of perspectives we don’t often see, like the casual reference to people rushing out to pour buckets of water on beached whales suffering under the heat of the African sun.”

Wallace Stegner’s Unsettled Country

Review in Utah Historical Quarterly:

“Perhaps there is something to glean from his writings—some bit of hope to drastically alter our current trajectory. But in order to do that, we need to know Stegner the man, not Stegner the sage. For this reason, Wallace Stegner’s Unsettled Country is an important and valuable work.”

Twenty Miles of Fence

Review in Rocky Mountain Reader:

Twenty Miles of Fence reminds us that romance with Rocky Mountain ranch life remains to be found, even to those not bred to it, if you come with the right cocktail of resources, gumption and sweat.”

Author Interviews

Pamela Smith Hill

Interview on Little House on the Prairie

Interview on WGN TV

William P. MacKinnon and Kenneth L. Alford

Interview on From the Desk

Dennis Snelling

Interview on The Extravaganza

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