<b>Both an enjoyable and a serious book.</b>

Observer

How did such a small, remote speck of a place come to loom so large in American lore and myth? With Peter Cozzens' artful book, we get the answer. <b>In these pungent pages, you can smell the whiskey, the gunsmoke, the horse lather, the gold dust, and the mining chemicals.</b> And you start to see Deadwood as something more, as a node of raw avarice and frank ambition reflecting larger American impulses that are still alive today.<b> Deadwood isn't dead. It lives on in legend, in pulp Westerns, films, and television shows, and now, in the pages of a fine non-fiction narrative that's as alluring as its subject.</b>

Hampton Sides, New York Times bestselling author of The Wide Wide Sea

<b>What a perfect marriage-one of the most exquisite chroniclers of America's Wild West exploring the most notorious town of the era.</b> Throughout <i>Deadwood</i>, Cozzens brings fresh drama and absorbing detail to paint a vivid portrait of the colorful characters who in just three short years etched this tiny if hellraising South Dakota mining community into the lore of our collective history. Exemplary in all respects, thanks to the author's storytelling skills, <i>Deadwood</i> lives again.

Tom Clavin and Bob Drury, bestselling authors of Blood and Treasure

Se alle

There is no western town more steeped in myth, legend, and fairy tale than Deadwood, South Dakota-not even Tombstone, Leadville, or Dodge City. It was the Wild West of dime novels, of breathless, not-quite-exactly-true accounts in the newspapers. <b>What Peter Cozzens has done with this remarkable book is to show us that the truth about Deadwood is, in fact, even more interesting than the myth.</b>

S. C. Gwynne, New York Times bestselling author of Empire of the Summer Moon

Peter Cozzens' <i>Deadwood </i>is <b>a sweeping saga of greed, stolen Indigenous land, and legendary westerners such as Wild Bill Hickok, Seth Bullock, and Lakota leader Crazy Horse.</b> With the in-depth research Cozzens is known for, thought-provoking new insights, and a narrative that moves along at a fast clip, <b>readers of <i>Deadwood </i>are guaranteed to hit pay dirt on every page.</b>

Mark Lee Gardner, author of Brothers of the Gun

In his <b>rollicking yet nuanced</b> book, Peter Cozzens <b>pans the gold-mining boomtown's history while sifting out some popular misconceptions</b>... Cozzens' <b>deeply researched</b> account follows some of the colorful characters associated with the town.

The Wall Street Journal

<b>A master historian </b>confronts the mystique of the wildest of the Wild West towns and the result is<b> a fast-paced, superbly written narrative marked with all the usual Peter Cozzens graceful touches. </b>A dream team of fabulous characters-Wild Bill Hickok, Calamity Jane, Crazy Horse, Seth Bullock, George Hearst, Al Swearingen-helps the author to craft<b> a marvelous true tale of deception, greed, and violence far stranger than any fiction. </b>Here is Western history with the bark on!

Paul Andrew Hutton, author of The Undiscovered Country

'What Peter Cozzens has done with this remarkable book is to show us that the truth about Deadwood is, in fact, even more interesting than the myth.' S. C. Gwynne, New York Times bestselling author of Empire of the Summer Moon

Infamous for its stage-coach robbing, whiskey-guzzling and rampant prostitution, the gold rush settlement of Deadwood, South Dakota, was once described as 'the most diabolical town on Earth'. Built in 1876 on land brazenly stolen from the Lakota people, it was an outlaw enterprise not subject to US laws or governance.

In Deadwood, award-winning historian Peter Cozzens sifts through myth and legend to recount the town's meteoric rise - a place where the currency was gold dust - and its stunning fall. He reveals how Deadwood's foundation bred a self-reliance and a spirit of cooperation unique on the frontier, making it an exceptionally welcoming place at a time of deep-seated discrimination. Along the way, Cozzens pulls back the curtain on legendary figures Wild Bill Hickok and Calamity Jane, and introduces us to colourful Deadwoodites: from Jack Langrishe to Judge Kuykendall, and Seth Bullock to Sol Star.

This is the first book to tell Deadwood's extraordinary story in full, revealing the true tale of how one frontier town, in only three years, imprinted itself on our imaginations as the best and worst of the West.

Les mer
The grisly true story of the infamous American frontier town of Deadwood, made famous in the eponymous HBO series.
Part I: Visions of Deadwood (ca. 1770-April 1876) 1: Pahá Sápa 2: The New El Dorado 3: No Sale 4: Gold in the Gulch Part II: A Town Built on Gold (May 1876-February 1877) 5: Centennial Town 6: Lies and Legends 7: "Take That, Damn You" 8: Lakota Autumn 9: The Montana Touch 10: The Day of Jubilee 11: A Hard Winter Part III: A Tumultuous Adolescence (March-December 1877) 12: Autocrats and Tenderfeet 13: Deadwood's Chinatown 14: The Brigands of the Black Hills 15: The Most Diabolical Town on Earth 16: San Francisco Capitalists and Soiled Doves 17: Reckonings Part IV: From Adolescence to Ashes (January 1878-September 1879) 18: Coming of Age 19: The Treasure Coach 20: A Solid Country 21: The Great Water Fight 22: Black Friday Epilogue: Epilogue
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781805460671
Publisert
2025-09-04
Utgiver
Atlantic Books
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
432

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Peter Cozzens is the author of over eighteen books on the Civil War and the American West. He recently retired after thirty years as a Foreign Service Officer with the U. S. Department of State. His previous book, The Earth Is Weeping, was awarded the Gilder Lehrman Prize for Military History and the Caroline Bancroft History Prize. The Warrior and the Prophet was the winner of the Western Writers of America Spur Award for Best Biography.