“Illuminating. . . . Jacobs’s history is essential and timely reading.”-Beth H. Piatote, <i>Journal of American History</i> "This is a moving, significant book. Justice, Jacobs explains, will come only when nonindigenous people acknowledge the damage done. <i>A Generation Removed</i> makes a major contribution toward bringing the story to light. It remains for the rest of us to read and teach it."-Sherry Smith, <i>Western Historical Quarterly</i> “[Jacobs] effectively elucidates the complicated policies surrounding the Indigenous child welfare crisis in a mesmerizing narrative that highlights how it’s not just an ‘American Indian story . . . but a profoundly American one.’”-Elise Boxer, <i>South Dakota History</i> "<i>A Generation Removed</i> is an important book that effectively researches and narrates a difficult and upsetting topic that has been all but ignored by mainstream American society for far too long."-Akim Reinhardt, <i>Nebraska History</i> "<i>A Generation Removed</i> is a powerful eye opener, covering a piece of history we push under the carpet at our own peril."-Alan Porter, <i>Saskatchewan History</i> "A solid account that calls for "a full historical reckoning" of this devastating chapter in the treatment of Native Americans."-<i>Kirkus</i> “Margaret Jacobs once again demonstrates her genius for writing history that combines penetrating analysis with heart-wrenching stories. Beautifully written, deeply researched, this important and amazing book examines a subject largely unknown to the public at large but all too familiar to Indigenous peoples who have suffered the pain and indignity of child removal.”-David Wallace Adams, author of <i>Education for Extinction: American Indians and the Boarding School Experience, 1875–1928</i> "Jacobs brings deep scholarship to a topic of searing national and transnational importance. In a respectful, clear voice, she guides the reader on a journey into the most intimate corridors of settler colonialism. This is a complex and often heart-wrenching history that provides salutary lessons for the future."—Ann McGrath, director of the Australian Centre for Indigenous History at Australian National University and coauthor of <i>How to Write History That People Want to Read</i> "Using compelling stories and weighty evidence, Jacobs has uncovered a modern and ongoing story of child-stealing in the United States. She lays out the shocking history of Native American adoption and the good liberal logic that enabled it in a page-turner of a book."—Anne F. Hyde, Bancroft Prize–winning author of <i>Empires, Nations, and Families: A History of the North American West, 1800–1860</i>