Extraordinary... Few writers possess the descriptive talent that the immensity of the American west demands.
The Times
Peter Cozzens's sweeping, expert and appalling account of the murder of America's Indians
Spectator
A detailed recounting of random carnage, bodies burned, treaties broken and treachery let loose across the land.
New York Times
Truly epic and beautifully written
Tribune
Treachery on such an epic scale can bear many retellings, and this account stands out for its impressive detail and scope.
Washington Post
Cozzens does an exceptional job of examining the viewpoints of both sides, making heavy use of previously untapped primary sources... This is a timely and thorough book, presenting the story without hyperbole or histrionics.
New York Journal of Books
Peter Cozzens, one of our finest working historians, has taken on a massive chunk of Native American history and delivered it with power, style, and insight. He is above all a great storyteller. I have never read better, more concise, or more entertaining versions of the Little Bighorn story, Geronimo's wild run to glory, the Ute War, or Captain Jack's rebellion in the northwest. There is much wisdom here, and much good writing.
- S.C. Gwynne, author of EMPIRE OF THE SUMMER MOON,
Magnificent... This is a beautifully written work of understanding and compassion that will be a treasure for both general readers and specialists.
- Jay Freeman, Booklist (Starred review)
I've been waiting for an up-to-date, objective, and well-researched book on the Indian Wars, and Peter Cozzens' <i>The Earth Is Weeping</i> is all that and more - an elegantly written narrative of one of the great sagas in American history, and better than <i>Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee</i>.
- James Donovan, author of A TERRIBLE GLORY,
Peter Cozzens reminds us that tragedy, not melodrama, best characterizes the struggles for the American West...<i>The Earth Is Weeping </i>is the most lucid and reliable history of the Indian Wars in recent memory.
- Victor Davis Hanson, author of CARNAGE AND CULTURE,
In sobering detail, Peter Cozzens has chronicled this dark chapter in our history.
- James M. McPherson, author of BATTLE CRY OF FREEDOM,
For 25 years the United States Army and the native peoples of the West struggled for their destiny, and the region's, an oft-told story more tragic with each retelling. Peter Cozzens' <i>The Earth is Weeping </i>provides all that, and adds a missing perspective on the lives of ordinary people on both sides.
- William C. Davis, author of THREE ROADS TO THE ALAMO,
Cozzens is an erudite storyteller, meticulous in his approach to documenting the west.
BBC History Magazine
The Times' Best History Books of 2017
Winner of the Gilder Lehrman Prize for Military History
Winner of the 2017 Caroline Bancroft History Prize
Shortlisted for the Military History Magazine Book of the Year Award
Nominated for the 2017 PEN Hessell-Tiltman
'Extraordinary... Cozzens has stripped the myth from these stories, but he is such a superb writer that what remains is exquisite' The Times
At the end of the Civil War, the American nation continued its expansion onto tribal lands, setting off a struggle that would last nearly three decades. Peter Cozzens chronicles the conflict from both sides in comprehensive and singularly intimate detail, bringing together a pageant of fascinating characters, including Custer, Sherman and Grant, as well as great native leaders such as Crazy Horse, Sitting Bull and Red Cloud. This is the tale of how the West was won... and lost.