A Google user
“This is a splendid narrative—touching, stark, and humane. Wild Men illuminates the lives and the worlds of these two remarkable men from the inside out.”
Brian DeLay, University of California, Berkeley
“Wild Men is one of those remarkable books that restores the lives of long-dead individuals to full immediacy and actuality. Calling attention to unexpected connections, finding and fielding the most telling and compelling of examples, and making a reckoning with tragedy’s capacity to coexist with comedy, Douglas Sackman has found, in the lives of Ishi and Alfred Kroeber, a parable that explores the most important dimensions of Western American history. Wild Men now leads my ‘top ten’ list of books that every person who cares about the American West should read.”
Patricia Nelson Limerick, author of Legacy of Conquest: The Unbroken Past of the American West, and Faculty Director and Chair of the Board of the Center of the American West, University of Colorado, Boulder
“Sackman provides an important revision to the historical interpretations of Ishi’s life. Rather than being the victim of modernization, Ishi engaged modernity and shaped it….Readers can see how Ishi’s life was informed by and how he informed American history in the early twentieth century.”
William Bauer, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
“Considering Ishi and his anthropologist, Alfred Kroeber, together is a beautiful stroke of genius and justice; this book interrogates the two men’s lives together and finds in their differences and their resemblances much that has never been said before about the times, the places, and the characters of each. It’s a timely reconsideration of who each man was and what his circumstances were, in an era that is not quite bygone enough, since we are still wrestling with its meaning and legacies. It is a graceful work of meta-anthropology to subject Kroeber to the same scrutiny.”
Rebecca Solnit, author of River of Shadows: Eadward Muybridge and the Technological Wild West and A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities that Arise in Disaster