Reviews
Review in Publisher’s Weekly:
“Dzukogi makes potent and capacious use of myth to distill past and present.”
Review in Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
“…an immersive, behind-the-scenes account of the 1970 Ali-Quarry fight in Atlanta, politician Leroy Johnson steps up as an unsung hero in his own right.”
Review in Missouri Historical Review:
“Giangreco is determined to counter misleading claims regarding Truman’s most controversial decision. The book should be essential reading for anyone who enters that debate in the future.”
Review in Japan Ball:
“…the book is replete with interesting anecdotes, detail, and background information that the average fan would not be aware of.”
Review in Asian Journal of Social Science:
“Alice Rudge has written an outstanding ethnography of the Batek of Pahang state, peninsular Malaysia, and she has done so by explicitly rejecting any attempt to discern how the Batek might be “different.”
Too Good to Be Altogether Lost
“Rather than sidestepping the criticisms leveled against Wilder in recent years, especially regarding her portrayals of Native Americans, Hill addresses them head-on, arguing that Wilder’s intention was not to endorse prejudice but to reveal its consequences.”
Review in Choice:
“As ethnographically informed literature, this study provides insight into the ongoing processes of the invention of tradition of Native life in the 21st century.”
Review in Isis:
“Kohout’s debut monograph is an impressively researched and rendered appraisal of soldiers’ impacts on environmental knowledge and ideas. It will be of interest for military historians, historians of empire, and scholars interested in the co-constitution of imperial formations and environmental knowledge.”












