Pekka Hamalainen is Rhodes Professor of American History at Oxford University and the author of The Comanche Empire, winner of the Bancroft Prize, and Lakota America: A New History of Indigenous Power. He lives in Oxford, England.
[A] towering achievement. By gathering the experiences of multiple Native peoples-across an astounding expanse of time and space-Indigenous Continent explodes the view that American history unfolded inexorably according to European and American design. -- Andrew Graybill - The American Scholar [M]agisterial . . . the pace and the scope of the book have a force of their own: Hamalainen makes it clear that America's past is crazily, energetically, tumultuously crowded with incident; that Indigenous power has affected everything about America . . . I can only wish that, when I was that lonely college junior and was finishing Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, I'd had Hamalainen's book at hand. It would have helped me see that there was indeed a larger story: that my civilization hadn't been destroyed; that my tribe's contribution to the past wasn't merely to fade away in the face of history; that Native peoples-for better or for worse-made this country what it was, and have a role to play in what it now struggles to be. -- David Treuer - The New Yorker [T]he single best book I have ever read on Native American history, as well as one of the most innovative narratives about the continent. -- Thomas E. Ricks - The New York Times Book Review Mr. Hamalainen's book provides a useful introduction to a vast history... -- Kathleen DuVall - The Wall Street Journal The author, an Oxford historian, recasts the history of North America from a Native American perspective, making clear that Native tribes controlled the continent for millenniums ('On an Indigenous time scale, the United States is a mere speck'). One of the best books ever written on Native American history. -- The New York Times Book Review