HomeBooksJournalsFor BooksellersFor AuthorsAbout
new releases
browse all books
browse by series
browse by title
browse by subject
New releases
Browse all books
Browse by series
Browse by subject
Browse by title
Conradiana
The 18th Century
Helios
Intertexts
W C Williams Review
Promotions
Publicity
Reviews
Sales reps
submit
submit
marketing
Submit
Manuscript
Marketing
Prizes
Contact
History
News
Resources
Order toll free from CDC 800.621.2736

Books : Releases : Fall 2009

  •  

I Do Not Apologize for the Length of This Letter (cloth)
Click below for larger images.
I Do Not Apologize for the Length of This Letter (cloth)

Retail Price $45.00
Sale Price $36.00
Native American history / Great Plains
216 pages | 6 x 9 | cloth
9 b/w photos
Plains Histories
Published Nov/ 2009
978-0-89672-666-6

A voice as resonant as her love of the Plains, a commitment even deeper

"I Do Not Apologize for the Length of This Letter" (cloth)

The Mari Sandoz Letters on Native American Rights, 1940–1965

Introduced and edited by Kimberli A. Lee, with foreword by John R. Wunder

Now it is time for you to read the letters of Mari Sandoz. If it has been a clear summer day and it is near sundown, take this book and a cool drink outside and soak in the wisdom of a writer with a cause. —John R. Wunder, from the foreword

Author Mari Sandoz was as passionate about Plains peoples as she was about language and literary acclaim. That the mastery of Crazy Horse’s biographer spilled into her zealous advocacy for Native Americans is scarcely surprising. An avid letter writer, Sandoz kept carbons of everything. Fortunately these came into the Sandoz Collection at the University of Nebraska Archives, organized by Kimberli A. Lee, foremost expert on Sandoz’s writings.

Though Sandoz richly deserves attention, recent scholarship is scant. In arranging and analyzing this correspondence, Lee reinstates Sandoz as one of the most significant non-Native chroniclers and advocates for Plains Indian cultures. There is much here for historians and other scholars of American Indian, Great Plains, rhetorical, and women’s studies. Yet Sandoz’s wider fan base should not be surprised to hearken to a voice and ardor they will find well familiar.

Kimberli A. Lee teaches in the Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures Department at Michigan State University and is working on a book on contemporary Native American music on the Great Plains. John R. Wunder, professor of history and journalism at the University of Nebraska, is the author of five books and the editor of the multivolume Native Americans and the Law: Contemporary and Historical Perspectives on American Indian rights, Freedoms, and Sovereignty. He lives in Lincoln, Nebraska.

Additional resources for this title include downloadable hi-res images and supplemental resources, where available:
Cover image
Author headshot
Author headshot
Press Release
Promotional flyer
Event poster
FREE teaching supplement
Author's website

You may also be interested in...