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The University of Utah Press Fall/Winter 2013 “Captures the sense of the street and its vitality. A significant ­contribution to the history of one of Utah’s most important cities.” —John Sillito, Weber State University, coeditor of A World We Thought We Knew: Readings in Utah History (The University of Utah Press, 1995)

On the Cover: Contents “Rainbow over Zoroaster.” Photo by Soa, Curtis-Conde. New Books 1-16

Distributed Clients 17 Our Mission The University of Utah Press is an agency of the J. Willard Marriott Library New in Paperback 18 of The University of Utah. In accordance with the mission of the University, the Press publishes and disseminates scholarly books in selected fields and other printed and recorded materials of significance to Utah, the Featured Backlist 18–19 region, the country, and the world.

Holiday Gift Guide 20–21 The University of Utah Press is a member of the Association Essential Backlist 22-27 of American University Presses.

Index 28 www.UofUpress.com 1 Orders: 800-621-2736 www.uofupress.com NEW BOOKS UTAH/WESTERN HISTORY - ory hist 2013 ober t 978-1-60781-270-8 western / Oc is a native of Weber Weber of is a native 978-1-60781-268-5 $44.95 978-1-60781-269-2 $24.95

ah th EBOOK ut 240 pp., 9 x 9, 108 b/w illus. 240 pp., o aper P Cl l Holley al V County, Utah, attended Weber State State Weber Utah, attended County, a BA in journalism and received College, of Utah, University the a JD from BYU, from University the Catholic and an MLS from has been decades he three of America. For histo and an independent librarian a law DC. He is the author Washington, rian in and Mike of James Dean: Biography The and the Manly ArtConnolly of Hollywood Gossip. - - crucible standing Val Holley Val 25th Street Confidential 25th Street and Dissipation along Decadence, Drama, Road Rowdiest Ogden’s The provocative, colorful history of Ogden’s colorful history Ogden’s of provocative, The 25th Street notorious This first full-length treatment of Ogden’s rowdiest road spot rowdiest of Ogden’s first full-length treatment This control of Ogden’s municipal government in 1889. In the early municipal government of Ogden’s control Progressive in statewide twentieth-century targeted was the street to epito come would it Prohibition efforts, and during reform Era programs. the futilitymize of liquor abatement entwined were whose careers figures larger-than-life lights who unabashedly Peery, Ward Harman Mayor with the street: filled the city- from vicious establish treasuryfees and fines with madam in Utah history; the most successful Belle London, ments; legacy who London’s to the heiress and Rosetta Ducinnie Davie, in the courts,became a celebrity and in the press. on the street, than one and more archives unexploited previously Material from but of a turbulent enrich this narrative photos historic hundred ­unforgettable street. traces Ogden’s transformation from quiet from transformation Ogden’s traces Confidential 25th Street of junction as waves railroad chaotic transcontinental hamlet to The population. non-Mormon fortune the city’s swelled seekers themes in larger in Ogden annals illuminates role outsized street’s was a ­ Street 25th Most significantly, history. Utah and U.S. Generations of Ogdenites have grown up absorbing 25th Street’s up absorbing 25th Street’s grown have of Ogdenites Generations of Utah has rest The depravity. and menace, legends of corruption, “gambling judge Ogden—known to centurytended in its first as a skid as a degraded row— years and in recent and tenderloin, hell” the Ogden embraces Present-day gaudy reputation. the street’s by it promotes and successfully decadence of 25th Street’s afterglow Larimer In the same preservationist tourists. spiritto as Denver’s art live is home to fine dining, 25th Street galleries, today’s Square, and the Utah condominiums, mixed-use festivals, street theater, Railroad Museum. State of Mormon-Gentile conflict, especially after the non-Mormon of long-­ Party, the People’s Party its rival, Liberal deprived ince the late 1800s, when professional fos- sil hunters vied with each other to bring the largest and most complete specimens to the museumS market, Utah has been one of the most fer- tile grounds for dinosaur discovery. Because rock from the Mesozoic era covers more than 25,000 square miles in Utah, the state is a natural museum of the great age of dinosaurs. The presence of sites such as Dinosaur National Park and the Cleveland- Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry underline Utah’s ongoing paleontological significance. There are probably more paleontologists residing and working in Utah now than at any time in the past, and the state even has an official dinosaur, the Allosaurus. 3 Orders: 800-621-2736 www.uofupress.com NEW BOOKS PALEONTOLOGY/UTAH - ah /Ut 2013 ogy ol ober t 978-1-60781-265-4 336 pp., 8 x 10 336 pp., Oc 978-1-60781-264-7 $34.95 aleont P Ebook aper P 124 b/w illus., 49 color illus., 19 maps illus., 49 color 124 b/w illus., —Scientific American Independent (Moab) Times —The —Library Journal “Of books on dinosaurs there are are “Of books on dinosaurs there a wider tar but this one aims at many, constructed book is carefully The get. its abundant and is immensely aided by illustrations.” beautiful book, with lots of truly stun- “A a have You’ll and photos. ning drawings time putting it down.” hard “This anyone ambitious book will satisfy were things what wondered who has ever the earth.” like when dinosaurs roamed Praise for the first edition: Praise - Paintings by Carel Brest van Kempen van Brest Carel by Paintings DeCourten and Frank John Telford by photographs Color Dinosaurs of Utah Second Edition DeCourten Frank An updated edition of the popular work that An work the popular of edition updated about all ages and educated has enchanted in Utah dinosaurs is a professor and chair in the department is a professor ourten DeC Frank enlivens our understand- edition of Dinosaurs of Utah second enlivens This them and explaining by creatures ing of these amazing vanished the often superficial beyond It- us. represen moves to their world portrays accurately and more been so prevalent have that tations known now the region roamed the variety once of dinosaurs that as Utah. saur anatomy, as do five stunning paintings by Carel Brest van Brest Carel by stunning paintings as do five saur anatomy, John by than fortyKempen. More landscape photographs color in DeCourten contexts modern geologic show and Frank Telford of the most parts the dynamic nature and emphasize the state of is also a series of detailed maps, There history. geologic region’s the tremendous show this edition, that new to including several from era within the Mesozoic shifts occurred that topographical 175 a span of over periods, Cretaceous the late to Triassic the early million years. and is California, Valley, of earth in Grass College Sierra at sciences Basin Geology in Great Adventures Land: Broken the author of The (The 2003). of Utah University Press, More than one hundred of author Frank DeCourten’s meticulous DeCourten’s of author Frank than one hundred More of dino features and various remains fossil illustrate line drawings Dinosaurs of Utah the gap between is an ambitious book bridging and the era Mesozoic Utah’s on literature technical the voluminous describe the elementary dinosaurs at that publications numerous as part here of the Mesozoic presented dinosaurs are “Utah” level. region Plateau in the evolved that ecosystems terrestrial - envi landscapes, of the changing discussed in the context and are record. in the geological and biota recorded ronments, 4 NEW BOOKS HISTORY The University of Utah Press Fall/Winter 2013 Panama Canal project.” pened immediately thespectacular after capitalists inforeign lands, whichhap adventures engineers ofAmerican and records ofonethemostfascinating “A relevant rare contribution to thevery in SpanishandPortuguese. the state authorsare Both ofUtah. fluent Brazilian Consulrently for theHonorary UPI for theLatin area. American Heiscur (UPI) andlater was thevice president of spondent for United Press International worked asaforeignwhere Gary corre lived inBrazil for more thanten years, Gary —Rosental Calmon Alves, Center Knight for of Texas at Austin inthe Americas,Journalism The University Neeleman P aper EBOOK 978-1-60781-276-0 161 b/willus., 2maps December 978-1-60781-275-3 $29.95 978-1-60781-275-3 208 pp., 7x10 Hist

and ory R 2013 ose Neeleman - - - conditions for to theworkers impossible. next mosquitoes,bearing andthethreat ofwild animals—which made in thejungles—theunforgiving climate, andyellow malaria fever- of theworkers ontherailroad illustrate thechallengesofworking the firstfive milesof track. ofthelife Theimagesanddescriptions more than10,000workers losttheirlivescal jungleonearth, laying Velho. thisuniquerailroad Because traversed thedensesttropi- atexpatriates Porto wholived headquarters intheconstruction English-language newspaper written for andby the American also includesreproductions Velho ofthePorto Marconigram, an tographer hired to oftherailroad. document theconstruction It have rarely beenseen—takenby aNew DanaMerrill, York pho in Tracks are intheAmazon thephotographs—which until now import ofthisincrediblescratch story. particular thesurface Of about theMadeira-Mamoré over Railroad theyears, mostbarely Although there have beenmany chronicles brief andwritings to Asia. once theworld supplyofrubbermovedunnecessary from Brazil integral industry, therailroad piece oftherubberexport became andcompleted twentieth in1912.Intended asan early century stalled by lackoffunding, was buttheproject resurrected inthe Amazonian waterway. Completion oftherailroad was initially the Amazon—facilitating shipment to foreign viathe markets nates andtravels inBolivia almost2,000milesthrough Brazil to road shouldbebuiltaround River—which theMadeira origi- fromproducts theAtlantic Coast, thegovernment decidedarail- the Pacific Coast. SinceBolivia needed to finda way to move locked andunableto shipitsminerals from andotherproducts hadlostitswar1867, Bolivia withChile, causingitto become land- oftheMadeira-Mamoré beganin When Railroad construction Foreword by Wade Davis Neeleman andRose Neeleman Gary on theMadeira-Mamoré Railroad LifeoftheWorkersThe Day-to-Day T conditions oftheAmazon tivating taleofbuildingarailroad intheharsh Never-before-published photos highlight thecap racks intheA mazon - - 5 Orders: 800-621-2736 www.uofupress.com NEW BOOKS WESTERN HISTORY - - ory 2013 Hist 978-1-60781-315-6 Bilbiography of the author of Bilbiography November Western has spent twenty-five years twenty-five has spent

Ebook 336 pp., 22 b/w illus., 6 x 9 22 b/w illus., 336 pp., PAPER 978-1-60781-314-9PAPER $19.95 Lago Grand Canyon and the Lower Colorado River Colorado and the Lower Canyon Grand  Spamer, —Earle Don exploring the Grand Canyon, having kay having Canyon, exploring the Grand aked it six times and backpacked it more than sixty He has extensively times. history and has Canyon Grand researched during discoveries made archaeological Lago is of backcountryhis years research. articlesthe author of numerous and of the . Trivia Canyon bestselling book, Grand “The the here—largely for author presents first time—several narratives independent Grand at events historical to relate that makes them stand out from What Canyon. most of the nar is that works all previous little are that events embrace ratives known,known, or known incompletely undocumented only through previously other works respect to With tradition. oral work is unique.” Lago’s in its field, - - - Don Lago Canyon of Dreams of Canyon History Canyon Grand from Stories An storyteller engaging true stories life to brings history human Canyon’s Grand from This eclectic compilation runs the gamut from the idiosyncratic the idiosyncratic eclectic runs the gamut from This compilation and everything the empirical, the landmark, to to the mythical appeal to to and sure captivating are narratives The in between. his- long and complex Canyon’s in the Grand interested readers a valuable and will prove researched is thoroughly work The tory. sheds of Dreams Canyon scholarship. historical to contribution on and takes readers aspects obscure of the canyon on many light in the process. rollicking adventures aration for lunar explorations. Famous writers and poets have and poets have writers Famous lunar explorations. for aration and God. find the meanings of nature to the canyon looked to myth an elaborate hoax into turned a 1909 newspaper Dreamers of Dreams Canyon in the canyon. tombs Egyptian about ancient of Brighty that including the burro, these and other stories, tells and the story of a teenaged novel, a classic children’s who inspired “pushin’ and a summer living in a trailer who spent Roger Miller, “King of the Road.” his song leading to the canyon, at broom” against the fight Randolph Hearst’s William tycoon Newspaper Service property retain Park on the canyon to National owned he being little known Despite in the rim tale. is another illuminating the fight as a piv history, served Canyon Grand official annals of of promoters struggle between in the much broader otal moment preservation. for and those advocating wilderness conquest In 1928 astronomer Edwin Hubble came to the canyon to test test to the canyon Hubble came to In Edwin 1928 astronomer In observatory. the 1960s the greatest the world’s for it as a site learn geology in prep to the canyon hiked into astronauts Apollo ativity, leaving an indelible mark on all who have encountered its encountered mark an indelible on all who have leaving ativity, of the canyon’s Stories spectacular landscapes. vistas and intricate and deep as varied are visitors its modern day early to inhabitants cliffs. as the canyon’s The Grand Canyon—long recognized as one of North America’s as one of North America’s recognized Canyon—long Grand The and cre human imagination stirred wonders—has natural premier 6 NEW BOOKS MORMON STUDIES/FOLKLORE STUDIES The University of Utah Press Fall/Winter 2013 Mormon villagegenre atitsbest. well asfourclassicstudiesthatrepresent the ethnographic studyofMormonculture as ­thorough of to introduction andoverview Together volumes thesetwo provide a 1920–1950. and The Navajo by theFranciscans, asSeen and Transcendence S.Bahr) (withKathleen Centered Family Love, Sciences: Sacrifice, recent booksincludeToward More Family- ology ofreligion, andethnicrelations. His where heteaches socialtheory, thesoci- sociology at Brigham Young University, Howard Mormon Mormon Four ClassicMormon Villiage Studies cl cl o M. B o th EBOOK 978-1-60781-323-1 EBOOK 978-1-60781-321-7 th Studies Studies 978-1-60781-322-4 $40.00 978-1-60781-322-4 978-1-60781-320-0 $37.95 978-1-60781-320-0 February February Saints Observed ahr 288 pp., 6x9 336 pp., 6x9 33 illus. 15 illus. isaprofessor of /Folk /Folk 2014 2014 ore ore Studies Studies s

twenty-first century. communities inthefollowingstudy Mormon decadesandinto the respected arena studies. ofcommunity Researchers continued to by themid-1950sitwas asubfieldwithinthe and interdisciplinary; beyond Nelsonandhisstudents, becoming more sophisticated thefollowing Over Utah. three decades, thegenre expanded century, beginning Nelson’s withLowry 1923research inEscalante, villagestudiesinthetwentieth andcontinuity ofMormon the rise villagelife. ofMormon ­holistic overview Heconcludes by tracing a andconstructs summarizes andanalyzes theirobservation, Brenchley—Bahr’s volume introduces thesetalented ­ HowardElizabeth Kane, Stansbury, JohnGunnison,andJulius accounts oflife amongtheMormons, includingRichardBurton, studies.field of community Basedmostlyonninefamoustravelers’ twentieth century, showing theirproper context inthe­ protoethnographyearly villagestudiesinthe to Mormon scholarly pass through butstopped andstudied. Second, that itconnects life inthe West whodidnotjust asseenby qualifiedobservers Mormon presents composite arich viewofnineteenth-century studies available, thisvolume thecanontwofold. extends First, it The village mostcomplete andassessment ofMormon overview Howard M.Bahr Studies ofMormonVillage Life, 1850–2005 Observed Saints half-century, drawing upon recent site visits, interviews, andtexts. highlights changes inthefourafterword villagesacross thepast villagers. Mormon Editor Howard life Bahr’s ofmid-century to-day pated invillagelife. Together, theycapture detailtheday- inrich investigationsoffer- in-depth wholived andpartici by observers tially from villagestudiesinitiated earlier by Nelson’s work and ously unpublished. These villagestudiesdiffer postwar substan- makes available four villagestudies, ofthebestMormon allprevi- as acomprehensive introduction to thissecond volume, which StudiesofMormonVillage Life, Observed: 1850–2005serves Saints O’Dea, and Wilfrid and O’Dea, C.Bailey Banfield, HenriMendras, Thomas F. with contributions by Edward C. Edited by Howard M.Bahr Village Studies Four Classic Mormon observers, observers, thriving thriving 7 Orders: 800-621-2736 www.uofupress.com NEW BOOKS MORMON STUDIES/FOLKLORE STUDIES - Studies ore 2013 olkl /F is a professor of English is a professor 576 pp., 7 x 10 576 pp., is an associate professor of professor is an associate 978-1-60781-284-5 $34.95 November 55 b/w illus., 3 maps 55 b/w illus., Studies EBOOK 978-1-60781-285-2EBOOK aper P Mormon Mould A. Eliason A. Eric Tom anthropology and director of PERCS, the and director anthropology and Research Ethnographic for Program He Elon University. at Studies Community , Choctaw is the author of Choctaw Tales and of the Future Prophecy: A Legacy Personal Narrative, the Small Voice: Still, Tradition. and the Mormon Folk Revelation, at Brigham Young University and the chap and University Young Brighamat Special Forces 19th 1st Battalion the lain for He is the of the Utah Guard. National J. Goldenauthor of The Kimball and Stories Mormons and Mormonism: An Introduction Religion. World an American to ore - - introductory according to to according Edited and with Introductions by Eric A. Eliason and Tom Mould Tom and with Introductions and Eric A. Eliason Edited by atter-day L Latter-day Studies Mormon Folklore A collection of importantA collection portrayals and studies introductions analytical folk life with of Mormon Cabrini College Cabrini Primiano, Norman eonard —L ing to read and useful pedagogically since they represent the work the work they represent since and useful pedagogically read ing to scholars.” folklore well-respected of many “I applaud the editors for their work! It their work! is certainly for “I applaud the editors about time folklore of an anthology Mormon someone has finally edited that both fascinat articles are The the volume chosen for scholarship. - litera sociology, anthropology, Mormon studies, in folklore, ested studies. and religious ture, The thorough introduction by the volume editors elucidates the elucidates editors the volume by introduction thorough The and questions shaping the study of tensions, major influences, six parts book is divided into The ­ Mormon folklore. the over covered scholars have that exploring the ground While of LDS those areas Eliason and Mould also illuminate past century, fertile for exposing areas been understudied, have that folklore the most up-to-date- and comprehen Providing research. future is Latter-day survey Lore sive of Mormon studies available, folklore inter and readers scholars, students, for an indispensible resource gathers nearly thirty gathers Latter-day in Mormon Lore seminal works nineteenth late in the its beginnings scholarship from folklore the depth, breadth, highlight to in order century the present to of LDS folklore examination This and richness scholarship. of that shifts and topical that methodological, theoretical, ­studies reveals are research for future Areas also reflect shifts at large. in the field also suggested. ­ extensive The patterns. and topical major thematic each of the six parts invaluable preceding provide essays studies the frame to contexts and theoretical cultural, ­historical, culture; and landscape of regional symbols, follow: society, that and the supernatural; sacred the and traditions; customs formative humor; and the imagination; and the historical heroes, pioneers, of Mormon contexts folklore. international 8 NEW BOOKS ARCHAEOLOGY/ANTHROPOLOGY The University of Utah Press Fall/Winter 2013 Grande andspansanarray ofspecialties.” Rio of humanoccupation intheNorthern gle volume. covers It thousandsofyears menting onasingleregion into asin- awiderange“Brings ofspecialtiescom- Research Inc. the material studiesprogram at Statistical investigatoris principal anddirector of from theUniversity ofNewMexico and ley Brad Adler,—Michael  Pueblo World, A.D. 1150–1350 Archaeol Cl 43 b/willus., 19maps, 21tables o J. Vierra EBOOK 978-1-60781-267-8 th 978-1-60781-266-1 $60.00S 978-1-60781-266-1 Oc 336 pp., 7x10 ogy authorofThe Prehistoric t ober /Anthropol received hisPhD 2013 ogy ethnic economies. tence, villageformation, early ethnogenesis, andhistoric multi­ foraging societies, agriculture, early ceramic technology, subsis - in obsidiansource studies, geoarchaeology, pastclimatic regimes, From MountainTop to Valley Bottom willappealto thoseinterested seeks to integrate newdata from lowland anduplandcontexts. current research scholarsand abroad that perspective from expert across theregion. This volume provides of bothacross section ofsubsistencea variety resources andtheexchange ofproducts but to the organization oflabor neededto cooperatively exploit refers to thetools andfacilitiesthat pastpeoplemay have used relationship withthe “above” and “below.” Technology notonly andpresent—viewfluid nature their withwhichpeople—past ing ofpeopleacross thelandscapealongwithdynamic and past andpresent environments. Movement refers to theposition- Grande valley, Rio ecological backdrop ofthenorthern including landscape, movement, andtechnology. Landscapeinvolves the The essays are inthiscollection unified by three specificthemes: land use. natureever-changing oflowland andcomplementary andupland incorporates thisnewresearch into that aperspective linksthe ged margins oftheriver valley. From MountainTop to Valley Bottom onthenearby mesasandmountainsducted that form therug- research and excavations involving surveys large-scale beencon- ical remains found alongthisvalley corridor. Onlyrecently has anthropological research focused primarily onthearchaeolog- Taos to Albuquerque. The of region history hasalongandrich NewMexico fromGrande valley asitcutsthrough north-central Rio and culturally diverse landscapes, whichincludethenorthern The Southwest American ischaracterized by environmentally Edited by Bradley J. Vierra GrandeRio Valley, NewMexico Understanding Past Land UseintheNorthern to ValleyBottom Mountain T From the usesofdiverse landscapes Leading scholarsofferbroad perspectives new on op

9 Orders: 800-621-2736 www.uofupress.com NEW BOOKS WESTERN HISTORY/ ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY - -

ory / ory 2013 author of received his PhD his PhD received ory l Hist al Hist Hist 978-1-60781-312-5 250 pp., 6 x 9 250 pp., ogers

978-1-60781-311-8 $39.95 978-1-60781-313-2 $24.95 24 photos, 6 maps 24 photos, November Western th ebook S. R S. o t Environmen aper Prize P Cl Western A Life in the Canyons Dave Rust: l or al  H. Swanson, —Frederick Stegner Jedediah in American history from Arizona State in American history State Arizona from with Historical and is a historian University Inc. in Missoula, Associates, Research of In the President’s Montana. He is editor Office: 1879– The Diaries of L. Nuttall, John Handcart1892, winner of the Evans Award and the Best University Utah State from the from Documentary Book Award Mormon History Association. to contribution and engaging fresh “A its especially for history, environmental Mormon of the her cultural interpretation itage as a driving force for the economic the economic for itage as a driving force of the Utah hinterlands. development - impera cultural how shows work Rogers’s arising out of the nineteenth-centurytives including memories period, settlement 1880 Bluff–Sanexpe Juan of the 1879 to and sig- their lasting roads dition, gave meaning in the minds of many nificant contemporary residents.” ace - all - W t Environmen the of oads in the Wilderness oads in the American in Winner Jedediah S. Rogers R Country Canyon in Conflict Analyzes the critical role of roads and clashing and clashing of roads role Analyzes the critical wilderness over fights in historical worldviews Utah and Northernin southern Arizona Rogers reflects on the meaning of roads amid environmental roads amid environmental Rogers reflects on the meaning of Transporting country. grip the canyon to continue conflicts that bat Trail like the infamous Burr controversies road from readers The canyon country of southern Utah and northern canyon The Arizona—a desert and gorges and sand punctuated by celebrated of rock among vying and disparate contested hotly mesas—is a region wilderness preservation to industrial developers from interests, per in an area the conflictsraging to central Roads are advocates. in the continental places roadless large as one of the last ceived country in fact an extensive canyon contains The States. United constructed under originally network many of dirt and roads, trails the authority of a one-sentence mining law, in an 1866 statute roads and paved well-groomed While known later as R.S. 2477. twentieth- of the modern the industrialization age, signify came to human as intrusive roads century regarded conservationists have - Roads connect commu rural wild lands. imprints on the nation’s in some cases blend harmoni and - growth, spur economic nities, disturb and divide, but they also fracture the landscape, ously into and spoil industrial development, facilitate and habitat, wildlife wilderness. Staircase–Escalante in Grand of roads web the contentious tle to Rogers dem- Canyon, Arch in off-roading Monument to National in historyrooted deeply and cul- the conflicts how are onstrates Anglo-Americanregion first permanent The settlers in the ture. about land and resource Mormon views pioneers and current were those about how stories use in southern Utah from often derive communities found their to defied wilderness pioneer ancestors - environ to in the desert. will be of interest Roads in the Wilderness West, in the American who live and those historians, mentalists, country and the think about the canyon to readers challenging embedded in the land. stories 10 NEW BOOKS ARCHAEOLOGY/ARCHAEOLOGY The University of Utah Press Fall/Winter 2013 about.” to a lotmore learn have theopportunity academic circles have heard ofandnow that manyect peopleinbothCRMand well synthesizedreported, andvery proj- “ClearlyIt’s significant. alarge, well- Group. at Far Western Anthropological Research Davis. of Anthropology, University ofCalifornia, also aresearch affiliate Department atthe ily inCalifornia andtheGreat Basin.Heis years ofarchaeological experience, primar Research Group andhasmore than38 founders ofFar Western Anthropological Berg Gilrea Kell William Morgan,—Christopher University ofNevada, Reno y are archaeologists allpracticing R. Mc th P Archaeol aper Hildebrand , Jerome 74 b/willus., 16color illus., EBOOK 978-1-60781-306-4 Guire 16 maps, 100tables 978-1-60781-305-7 $50.00s 978-1-60781-305-7 December 288 pp., 81/2x11 ogy isoneoftheoriginal /Archaeol King 2013 t , , andJohn Amy ogy

- intensity of hinterland occupation. riverine have corridor corresponding and effects onthecharacter ­settlement-subsistence andlifeways at core settlements alongthe thePuebloanafter period, theauthors suggestthat changesin clustered alongthe Virgin before, Rivercorridor during, and ing at hinterlands adjoining theprehistoric settlements that area Butte. suchasGold look By alongaboundary expected place development, relationships andexternal that shouldbe This mixofcultures illustrates historical contingency, in- to thepresent. the Southwest from at (AD leastthetimeofhistoric contact 1500) Buttebasin andGold but muchofthenorthwestern quadrant of Paiutethe Southern arrived andoccupied notonlythe Virgin River didn’t advance muchbeyond the Colorado River corridor. Finally, sway for several hundred years, between AD1100and1500,but ofdroughtsseries andothercultural disruptions. The Patayan held a few hundred years onlyto completely vanish by a AD1250after House, fullvillage and agricultural life developed over thespanof years ago. At suchiconic sites asLost City, Ridge, andMesa Main Farmers suddenlyappeared inthe Virgin Riverbasinabout1,600 Dramatic developments occurred inthisarea oftheDesert West. elements that canbetraced to allthree culture zones. has a12,000-year record ofhumanoccupation witharchaeological the Great Basin,andtheColorado Plateau Nevada— insouthern thecrossroadshistoric sites. Butte—at oftheMojave Gold Desert, umentation ofmore than377sites, andthe excavation ofninepre involving thesystematic ofmore than31,000acres, survey thedoc ological investigations Nevada, insouthern ever undertaken the results ofonethelargest andmostcomprehensive archae in humanbehavior ecology andotherforaging modelsto present The Butte Prehistory ofGold usesatheoretical rooted perspective Amy Gilreath, Jerome King, andJohnBerg Kelly McGuire, William Hildebrandt, A Virgin Hinterland, River ClarkCounty, Nevada T Nevada and flow of human occupation insoutheastern A majorarchaeological examination oftheebb Universit he Prehistory of Gold Buttehe Prehistory ofGold y of Ut ah Anthropol logica P apers #127 - - - - Orders: 800-621-2736 www.uofupress.com 11 NEW BOOKS archaeology/anthropology ­ ogy 2013 is a professor is a professor l anthropo / Late Paleoindian Paleoindian author of Late ogy 336 pp., 7 x 10 336 pp., 8 maps, 34 tables 8 maps, September 978-1-60781-262-3 $65.00S th EBOOK 978-1-60781-263-0EBOOK ornfeld o 54 b/w illus., 85 line drawings, drawings, 85 line 54 b/w illus., Cl l Archaeo (The 2009). of Utah University Press, Occupation of the Southern Rocky Mountains  —Bonnie Pitblado, l K l arce M of anthropology at the University of the University at of anthropology During nearly forty of Wyoming. years books and ten he has written research articlesnumerous about Rocky Mountain He and prehistory. archaeology and Plains - archaeol closely with avocational works North throughout ogists America and is (with Marythe coeditor Larson and Lou of Hell Gap: A Stratified C. Frison) George of the at the Edge Campsite Paleoindian Rockies contribution. Rocky significant Mountain “A short shrift, long received archaeology scientists and more more that now yet learning much are in it we engaging are a half- imagined have could than we more century of forager range ago about the in Northadaptations American settings.” ocky Mountaineers - - - - he First R he First Marcel Kornfeld T Colorado before Coloradans Considers the human adaptation of the earliest of the earliest adaptation human the Considers Middle Park inhabit Colorado’s people to The first inhabitants of first inhabitants RockyThe country high Mountain left a rich - res as food as well and projectile points tools, of shelters, record 12,000 and between all dating of bison bone, idues in the form inter for database a robust provides record This ago. 9,000 years ting, an environment that demanded unique adaptive strategies strategies adaptive demanded unique that an environment ting, of Middle People conditions. and hypoxic stress because of cold pre of any with some of the most extreme conditions coped Park in North population historic of America, the stressors dealing with - acquisi food intensifying by temperatures and low high elevations warm cloth- and tailoring sophisticated tion, constructing shelters, while still of these early Coloradans, record archaeological The ing. in the about lifeways of information a wealth provides meager, Rocky Mountain high country. the offers Kornfeld and unique adaptations. their lifeways preting Park and Rocky of the original Middle Mountain first treatment approach This perspective. a biocultural from human populations the frame processes and cultural both biological suggests that such a process While human adaptation. of a successful outcome low-eleva- investigating some anthropologists by be resisted may when trying it is essential understand the dynamics to tion groups, of those living in the high country. Based on archaeological research in Colorado’s Middle Park—a Middle Park—a in Colorado’s research Based on archaeological in the Europeans by basin initially encountered high mountain people— the Ute by centuries The for early 1800s and occupied Rocky Mountaineers is a prehistory of the earliestFirst people of the and their prede Utes The Age. of the Ice the conclusion at region set mountain in this high 12,000 years for and thrived lived cessors 12 NEW BOOKS ARCHAEOLOGY The University of Utah Press Fall/Winter 2013 or polishing.” created oraltered by grinding, abrading, whoseforms were blages ofstone artifacts andinterpretationdescription ofassem- careful studybyworth anyone faced with and thoughtful deliberation. The bookis ofhard work her own quarter-century oughly documented manualbasedon ing produced awell-organized andthor “Adams isto becommended for hav Praiseedition: forthefirst —Lithic Technology P aper EBOOK 978-1-60781-274-6 76 illus., 14tables, 1map 978-1-60781-273-9 $40.00S 978-1-60781-273-9 November Archaeol 336 pp., 6x9 ogy 2013 - - used them. andisinterestedfacts more inlearning aboutthepeoplewho logical field orstudentworker whoencounters- ground stone arti usefulreference isanimportant, Stone Analysis for any archaeo Press’sUtah at www.UofUpress.com. openaccess portal Ground tions for completing themwillbeavailable ontheUniversity of andassemblages. Recording forms andinstruc ments ofartifacts The methodspresented guidequantitative andqualitative assess- are applicableto any intheworld. collection attributes basedondesign, anduse manufacturing, important lyzing andclassifyingstone artifacts. These techniques record ysis. This studypresents aflexible method yet structured for ana- that have utilized atechnological approach to ground stone anal- rates theseadvances, includingexamples ofinternational research nographic andexperimental research. The second editionincorpo many advances inscientific technology anddevelopments ineth- the world. thedecadefollowing In itspublication, there have been The interest firsteditionofGround sparked Stone Analysis around architectural pieces. suchasaxes,sion orpecking, pipes, figurines, ornaments, and shapedbyishers stones, abra- andhammerstones, andartifacts “ground stone.” andpestles, abraders,This includesmortars pol- to alter otheritems through abrasion, orpolishingas pecking, that areArchaeologists altered definestone artifacts by orused Jenny L.Adams EditionSecond A Technological Approach Ground Stone A for thestudyofground stone artifacts updated editionoftheessentialreferenceAn Archaeology, Inc., Tucson, Arizona. A copublica Jenny L . Adams tion

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13 NEW BOOKS s is a PhD candi- is a PhD ogy 2013 zwa is an anthropology is an anthropology ober t 240 pp., 7 x 10 240 pp., S. Ja S. l Archaeo Oc H 978-1-60781-271-5TH $65.00 EBOOK 978-1-60781-272-2 EBOOK E. Perry E. O 24 b/w illus., 19 maps, 20 tables 19 maps, 24 b/w illus., CL opher —Robert Reno Nevada of University G. Elston, Christ Jennifer professor at California State University, University, State California at professor of The She is a coauthor Channel Islands. and Middle and Early Arena Site Punta Development on Santa Cultural Holocene California. Cruz Island, “Thiscontribution because is a significant a great one publication into it gathers otherwise might that deal of information to obtain, including the initial be difficult use of plants World, of the New population preserved(surprisingly on the islands well a rich the early record Holocene), back into and much else.” of ritual behavior, date in anthropology at Pennsylvania State State Pennsylvania at in anthropology date University. - - foragers foragers earliest set Edited by Christopher S. Jazwa and Jennifer E. Perry E. S. Jazwa Christopher and Jennifer by Edited California’s Channel Islands Channel California’s ArchaeologyThe of Human-Environment Interactions Definitive analyses of these unique Pacific coast coast Pacific Definitive unique of these analyses and their inhabitants islands This compendium of scholarship condenses decades of excavation decades of excavation of scholarship condenses compendium This will be indis- that volume illuminating a single, into and analysis World New in the Channel Islands or those interested pensable for historyor archaeology. terns on small and large scales, prehistoric trails, the use of plant the use of plant trails, prehistoric scales, on small and large terns the decisions that also address They and ceremonialism. resources, - envi and changing with diverse people made when confronted on distinct By focusing aspects of human relationships ronments. a story they tell time, of Channel Islands through with California’s edge of western and ritual on the coastal subsistence, settlement, North America. Tracing the human occupation of the islands from the ­ of the islands from the human occupation Tracing California’s Channel Islands are a chain of eight islands that extend islands that a chain of eight are Channel Islands California’s Point Barbara’s Santa from southern coastline along the state’s destinations tourist Popular the Mexican border. to Conception supported these islands once some of the earliest human today, of maritime evidence in the Americas; archaeological populations on the northern settlements Paleo-Indian back some islands dates indigenous peoples of the islands—the Chumash The 13,000 years. the southern of islands— Tongva of the northern islands and the and upon the abundance relying times by historic into thrived them. to available resources of marinediversity and terrestrial archaeological a definitive Channel Islands presents California’s and is of these unique islands and their inhabitants, investigation to discuss the islands and their peoples holisti- the first publication subgroup. than individually or by cally rather marine-adapted by the end of the Pleistocene ­ at tlement story the tragic to technologies tool stone with sophisticated - cen the nineteenth into continuing depopulation of historic pat including human settlement discuss topics contributors tury, 14 NEW BOOKS ARCHAEOLOGY/ANTHROPOLOGY The University of Utah Press Fall/Winter 2013 articles. articles. eleven books, andmore thanahundred Shehaspublished Smithsonian Institution. forInstitute Anthropology Museum at the oftheSummer and theco-director Anthropology at theUniversity ofArizona Studies and Indian sor ofAmerican Southwest inone place.” the archaeology oftheGreat Basinandthe date analyses, discussion,andsyntheses of volume ofthat presents that Iknow up-to- “A significant contribution. This istheonly books. East. Heistheauthorofmore thanadozen Southwest,American andtheNear Samoa, whohasworkedrian intheGreat Basin, is anarchaeologist andethnohisto anthropology, Brigham Young University, Joel C. Jane Nancy es in Social and Historical Studi es inSocial Contexts 3:Specialty Part —Barbara J. Mills, University ofArizona Part 2:CasePart StudiesandRegionalSyntheses xt EBOOK Full text Archaeol J. P P Cl P part 3EBOOK 76 b/willus., 33maps, 19tables 1-309-5art 2EBOOK 978-1-6078 aper o th arez 978-1-60781-307-1 $50.00S 978-1-60781-307-1 978-1-60781-282-1 $75.00S 978-1-60781-282-1 December t 360 pp., 8½x11 ski ogy o , professor of emeritus isaprofes- 1-310-1 978-1-6078 /Anthropol 978-1-60781-283-8 2013 ogy - and Southwest archaeology. to understandtheintricaciesofGreatto students seeking Basin will beofinterest orteaching to archaeology thosepracticing and need to learn? Where are we going? This comprehensive volume know: Where have we been? Where are we now? What dowe still about what Great Basinandsouthwestern archaeologists currently edge aboutawealth oftopics. Eachpaperasksfour questions new linesofresearch onthestate andreflect knowl ofourcurrent- engage. Contributors positnewthoughts designed to stimulate institution buildingandpoliticalprocesses inwhicharchaeologists strengths andlimitations ofpastandpresent approaches, andthe how archaeology hasbeenconceptualized andconducted, the aboutthenature willlearn Readers ofarchaeological careers, andculturaldescription syntheses. with rigorous asitiswithsite andinclusiveproduction knowledge endeavor that isasconcerned ofadisciplinary archaeology ispart the paststillaffectspresent—and how regional and topical came to berecognized, studied, and interpreted—in how short, regionally andtransculturally contextualized, how what we know to understandthepastwehow thelocalandspecificis mustknow Native Americans. Fowler hascontinually reminded scholars that a sweep oftopics from Paleoindian research to collaboration with onGreatperspectives BasinandSouthwest archaeology andcover ological, papersthat andempirical synthesize andpresent fresh west. arehuman pastofthearid Included theoretical, method- archaeology andsister disciplineswithoriginal scholarshiponthe volume encompasses thebreadth anddepthofFowler’s work in papers by andcolleagues friends that D. honorDon Fowler. The intheGreatArchaeology BasinandSouthwest isacompilation of J.Edited Parezo by Nancy andJoelC.Janetski Papers D. inHonorofDon Fowler and Southwest A and Southwest future ofarchaeology intheGreat Basin ofthepast,present, extensive and overview An rchaeology intheGreat Basin Orders: 800-621-2736 www.uofupress.com NEW BOOKS MIDDLE EAST STUDIES 15 2013 uthority, uthority, - profes is associate t Studies East t 978-1-60781-279-1 288 pp., 6 x 9 288 pp., is associate professor in the professor is associate November Middle Ebook H 978-1-60781-278-4TH $45.00S O Ephra tina CL Ha aphna D Meir sor of Islamic history in the Department and Jewish Studies Philosophy, of History, the She is of Israel. the Open University at Society of in a Period author of A Learned Leaders Wayfarers, and Spiritual Transition Open of the Israeli and coauthor in Piety, seriesUniversity . Islam Introduction to Department of Islamic and Middle Eastern of the Levtzion and director Studies the Hebrew at Islamic Studies for Center of Jerusalem. He is the author University Sphere and the Public of ʿUlamaʾ, Politics (The 2010), editor of Utah University Press, , and in Modern Times of Faith of Guardians A Religious Muslim Brethern: of The coeditor in a Changing RealityVision . eligious Knowledge, A Knowledge, eligious Edited by Daphna Ephrat and Meir Hatina Daphna Ephrat by Edited Eickelman Dale by F. Foreword R and Charisma Islamic and Jewish Perspectives An innovative volume that examines the sources sources the examines that volume An innovative and types authority of religious throughout history cultures Islamic and Judaic and across University of Notre Dame of Notre University Gaffney, D. —Patrick “Makes a significant contribution to scholarship across several several to scholarship across contribution “Makes a significant of course, including Islamic studies and Jewish studies, disciplines, and of religion, the sociology anthropology, but also history, political science.” Contributors tease out the sources and types of authority out the sources that tease Contributors of out of the Sunni and Shiʾi milieu and the evolution emerged of and disseminators who servedMuslim elites as formulators the by provided are insights knowledge Comparative and practice. among developments and historical of ideological examination similar modes of authority Jewish sages who inculcated from of the dynamic exploration rigorous The within their traditions. interface serves in Islam and Judaism of knowledge and power - both reli to common tensions a number of present highlight to By intertwining trajectories of gions. traces span that a historical discussion of cross-sectional integrative and change, continuity makes a dis- this volume perspectives, and comparative themes, tinct contribution. The issue of religious authority has long fascinated and ignited authority and ignited has long fascinated issue of religious The the anthropology, of disciplines: history, a range scholars across Religious Knowledge, and political science. sociology of religion, leadership in pre- and Charisma juxtaposes religious Authority, - tradi the Judaic modern and modern from Islam with examples of authority numerous in various iterations tion. By illustrating insights fresh offers volume this contexts, and cultural historical of of institutions of learning and other systems the nature into cul- the mechanisms for authority, establishing and disseminating - which reli by and the processes adherents, committed tivating and fragmented. leadership is polarized gious 16 NEW BOOKS MIDDLE EAST STUDIES The University of Utah Press Fall/Winter 2013 Nezam I’s Khosrow andShirin” Peter Chelkowski, “Dramatic Buildupin Classical Traditions Encounter theExotic” William Hanaway, “Poetry inRuins: Two Psychology ofJalaial-DinRumi” William C.Chittick, Evolutionary “The Gateway to Life intheEyes oftheSufis” Schimmel,Annemarie “Death asthe Master Narrative inPersian Literature” “The Mystical Ahmad Karimi-Hakkak, J. T. P. Bruijn,Introduction De Contributors CL O 978-1-60781-280-7 $35.00S TH 978-1-60781-280-7 Middle Oc 158 pp., 6x9 t ober East Studies 2013 Mirror oftheInvisible World: Tales ofNizami . from theKhamseh and Power East; Ta’ziyah: intheMiddle andDrama Ritual inIran; and Islamic Studies at New York University. He istheauthorofIdeology influence on Persian literature andculture for centuries. vision hasbeenconstant inallofthemandhasbeenapersistent than inany othercountry. Many have fadedaway, butthemystical Iranians. Over themillennia,more religions have sprungupinIran such asHafez, andRumiare Sadi, guidingbeacons for millionsof form inwhichPersianprimary mysticism isexpressed. Great poets regardless ofeducational background isalsothe orsocialmilieu. It life, ofIranian of thefabric appreciated by allmembersofsociety mysticism, cover 2,500years way ofaglorious oflife. Poetry ispart ture, theselectures,focusing primarily onPersian literature and originsBeginning ofthePersian withtheearliest state andcul- contributionsIranian to world civilization. achievements andhelpto createartistic greater understandingof tivolume that includeslectures explore series Iran’s cultural and ofPersianvarious aspects culture. This second volume inamul- College cover ofHumanitiesat thelectures theUniversity ofUtah, Foundation, Memorial Khazeni EastCenter, theMiddle andthe beganin1995.SponsoredUniversity ofUtah by Ali theReza StudiesThe at AliLecture inIranian Khazeni the Reza Series Edited by Peter J. Chelkowski Literature andMysticism Volume Two, Crafting theIntangible:Persian L R tures aboutPersian culture volumeSecond inamulti-volume seriesoflec- Pe ectures inI ectures eza A ter J. Che lkowski li Khazeni Memorial li Khazeni Memorial ranian Studies isaprofessor Eastern and ofMiddle Orders: 800-621-2736 www.uofupress.com

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Julia Corbett

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Maximilian Werner

“The sound of parenthood is the sigh.” So begins Gravity Hill, written from the per- spective of a new father seeking hope, beauty, and meaning in an uncertain world. Many memoirs recount the author’s experiences growing up and struggling with their demons; Werner’s shows how old demons can sometimes return on the heels of raising children. Werner narrates his struggle growing up in suburban Utah as a non-Mormon and what it took for him, his siblings, and his friends to feel like they belonged, indulging in each other and sometimes in destructive behaviors. Gravity Hill is infused with humor, honesty, and reflection, a literary memoir that is the story of the author’s descent into and eventual emergence from dysfunc- tion and pain to a newfound life.

Maximilian Werner earned an MFA in poetry from Arizona State Books from University and is the author of the essay collection Black River Dreams and the novel Crooked Creek. He lives in Salt Lake City and teaches writing at the University of Utah. the University 192 pp., 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 Paper 978-1-60781-242-5 $15.95 of Utah Press Ebook 978-1-60781-243-2 make great gifts Plain but Wholesome The Avenues Foodways of the Mormon of Salt Lake City Pioneers Second Edition

Brock Cheney Karl T. Haglund and Philip F. Notarianni Plain but Wholesome presents a Revised by Cevan J. LeSieur groundbreaking foray into Mormon history. Brock Cheney explores the Salt Lake City’s oldest residential historic district is a neigh- foodways of Mormon pioneers borhood known as the Avenues. During the late nineteenth from their trek west through the arrival of the railroad and century this area was home to many of the most influen- reveals new perspectives on the fascinating Mormon settle- tial citizens of Salt Lake City. Built between 1860 until 1930, ment era. Relying on original diaries, newspaper accounts, it contains a mix of middle- and upper-middle-class homes and recipe books from the 1850s, Cheney draws a vivid por- of varying architectural styles. This architectural diversity trait of what Mormon pioneers ate and drank. This first schol- makes the Avenues unique among Utah’s historic districts. arly examination of the subject is filled with lively prose that This newly revised edition of The Avenues of Salt Lake City will entertain even as it informs and instructs. by Cevan J. LeSieur updates the original book with a greatly expanded section on the historic homes in the neighbor- Brock Cheney teaches writing and literature in Utah’s hood, including more than 600 new photos, and additional public schools and has worked at several living history muse- material covering the history of the Avenues since 1980. ums in Utah and Colorado. He lives in Willard, Utah, where he keeps a vegetable garden and bakes bread in his wood-fired Cevan J. Lesieur is a native of Salt Lake City and a resi- brick oven. dent of the Avenues neighborhood, where he and his wife 224 pp., 6 x 9, 63 b/w illus. Heather have restored two homes. Paper 978-1-60781-208-1 $19.95 392 pp., 6 1/2 x 8, 42 b/w photos, 720 color photos, 9 maps Ebook 978-1-60781-209-8 Paper 978-1-60781-181-7 $29.95 Ebook 978-1-60781-997-4 The Shrinking Jungle A Novel The Selected Letters of Bernard DeVoto and Kevin T. Jones Katharine Sterne Edited by Mark DeVoto Anthropologist Kevin Jones takes the reader on a journey into the Bernard DeVoto (1897–1955) was a world of the Aché, hunter-gather- historian, critic, editor, professor, ers of the deep jungles of Paraguay. political commentator, and con- The Aché were among the last servationist, and above all a writer tribal peoples to come into peace- of comprehensive skill. His essays ful contact with the outside world, with some bands leaving were often brash and opinionated the forest only in the late 1970s. Jones was fortunate to live and kept him in the public limelight. In 1933 he received a among them while conducting ethnoarchaeological field- fan letter from Katharine Sterne, a young woman hospital- work as part of his graduate studies. Their stories were so ized with tuberculosis; his reply touched off an extraordinary compelling and the insights into their lives so profound that eleven-year correspondence. Sterne and DeVoto wrote to he wove them into this fictional account, seeking to share each other until her death in 1944, sometimes in many pages their unique culture while illustrating the universal nature of and as often as twice a week, exchanging opinions about life, the Achés’ concerns. literature, art, current events, family news, gossip, and shar- ing their innermost feelings. Kevin T. Jones lived among and studied the Aché while doing graduate work. He received his PhD from the Mark DeVoto, a son of Bernard and Avis DeVoto, is pro- University of Utah in 1984 and he has worked as an archaeol- fessor emeritus of music at Tufts University and a staff writer ogist in the Intermountain West for more than thirty years. for the Boston Musical Intelligencer, with numerous publica- 168 pp., 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 tions in analysis of nineteenth- and twentieth-century music Paper 978-1-60781-196-1 $15.95 to his credit. ebook 978-1-60781-197-9 504 pp., 6 x 9, 24 b/w illus. Cloth 978-1-60781-188-6 $29.95 Ebook 978-1-60781-224-1 22 Essential Backlist The University of Utah Press Spring/summer 2013 978-1-60781-184-8 978-1-60781-023-0 978-1-60781-216-6( by JohnCunningham Compiled andedited Albert White Hat Sr. Oral Teachings from Rosebud Life’s Journey–Zuya 978-1-60781-967-7( George B. Handley on theProvo River A Year ofRecompenses Home Waters P P 978-1-60781-137-4 978-1-60781-988-2( Laurance D. Linford Expanded Third Edition Chee Mysteries Leaphornin theJoe andJim Hideouts, Haunts, andHavens Navajoland Tony Hillerman’s P aper aper aper

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Indices

and ­Ceremonies 5: $30.00 30.00 $29.95 and The The $44.50S $54.50S $45.00 $ $45.00 $30.00 $35.00 The The Gods The Origin 4 4 th 2: 3: 1: th th o o o aper aper aper aper aper aper Cl When When the White House Calls Entrepreneur Immigrant From U.S. Ambassadorto John Price 978-1-60781-143-5 P Book Book Cl Books P Cl Book P P P Introduction P Shakespeare in Shakespeare Performance Process Inside the Creative Michael Flachmann 978-1-60781-984-4( 978-0-87480-002-9 and The Omens 978-1-60781-160-2 978-1-60781-128-2 978-0-87480-165-1 978-1-60781-157-2 978-1-60781-158-9 of the Gods 978-1-60781-159-6 Soothsayers The Florentine Codex: Codex: Florentine Charles E. Dibble Anderson and Arthur by O. with notes J. the Nahuatl from Translated de Sahagún,Bernardino 978-1-60781-156-5 ) e

s $55.00 $9.95 $24.95 th o aper aper P Charlotte’s Rose Charlotte’s A. E. Cannon 978-1-60781-141-1 P On the Way On the Way Else Somewhere to Sojourners in the European 1834–1930 West, Mormon Homer W. Michael by Edited 978-0-87480-994-7 Cl Least Cost Cost Least of Social Analysis ­Landscapes Studies Case Archaeological and White Devin A. by Edited Sarah L. Surface-Evans 978-1-60781-199-2( 978-1-60781-171-8 ) ) ) e e e s s $40.00 $70.00 $8.95 th th o o aper P Cl Copublished with the Poetry with the Poetry Copublished Foundation 978-1-60781-981-3( Blueprints Poetry Bringing Communities into Katharine Coles by Edited 978-1-60781-147-3 978-1-60781-219-7( People of the Water of the People among and Continuity Change of Bolivia the Uru-Chipayans Bastien Joseph W. 978-1-60781-148-0 Cl 978-1-60781-992-9( Tewa Origins and Historical Origins and Historical Tewa Anthropology Scott Ortman G. Winds from the from Winds North 978-1-60781-172-5 28 Adams, Ground Stone Analysis 12 Fillmore, Geological Evolution of the Kuehne, Henry Burkhardt and LDS Religious Knowledge, Authority, and Allen/Mitchell, Canyoneering the Colorado Plateau of Eastern Utah and Realpolitik in Communist East Germany Charisma 15 2011 Northern San Rafael Swell 22 Western Colorado 23 24 Reza Ali Khazeni Memorial Lectures in Amasa Mason Lyman 24 Fillmore, The Geology of the Parks, —, Mormons as Citizens of a Iranian Studies: Volume Two 16 American Missionaries and the Middle Monuments, and Wildlands of Southern Communist State 24 Rhode, Meetings at the Margins 26 East 25 Utah 23 Roads in the Wilderness 9 Archaeology in the Great Basin and First Rocky Mountaineers, The 11 Lady in the Ore Bucket, The 24 Rock Art of Utah, The 26 in t er a ll/W

F Southwest 14 Five Old Men of Yellowstone 18 Lago, Canyon of Dreams 5 Rogers, Roads in the Wilderness 9 As If the Land Owned Us 22 Flachmann, Shakespeare in Performance Last of the Robber’s Roost Outlaws 23 Rosenblatt, Dance with the Bear 27 Atiya, An Index to the History of the 27 Latter-day Lore 7 P ress Patriarchs of the Coptic Church 25 Florentine Codex 27 Least Cost Analysis of Social Landscapes Sahagún, Florentine Codex 27 Avenues, The 21 Foragers and Farmers of the Northern 27 Safavid Iran and Her Neighbors 18

U tah Kayenta Region 27 LeSieur, The Avenues 21 Saints Observed 6

of Baars, A Traveler’s Guide to the Geology Forced to Abandon Our Fields 22 Lewy, Essays on Genocide and Schaafsma, Rock Art of Utah 26 of the Colorado Plateau 23 Four Classic Mormon Village Studies 6 Humanitarian Intervention 25 Schiffer, Studying Technological Change Bahr, Four Classic Mormon Villiage Fowler, D. Cleaving an Unknown Life’s Journey—Zuya 22 26 Studies 6 World 23 Linford, Tony Hillerman’s Navajoland 22 Search for God’s Law, The 25 Bahr, Saints Observed 6 —, The Glen Canyon Country 26 Loendorf/Stone, Mountain Spirit 22 Selected Letters of Bernard DeVoto and U niversity Basso, Men at Work 27 Fowler, K., Northern Paiute—Bannock Lost Canyons of the Green River 23 Katharine Sterne, The 21

T he Bastien, People of the Water 27 Dictionary 22 Lost in Yellowstone 23 Seven Summers 20 Becoming White Clay 26 From Mountain Top to Valley Bottom 8 Lyman, Amasa Mason Lyman 24 Seymour, From the Land of Ever Winter Berglund/Roush, Sherman Alexie 22 From the Land of Ever Winter 26 26 Biddulph, Five Old Men of Yellow- Frontier Life, A 18 Madsen, Glory Hunter 24 —, Where the Earth and Sky Are stone 18 Mauss, Shifting Borders and a Tattered Sewn Together 26 Bitterroot and Mr. Brandborg, The 24 Geib, Foragers and Farmers of the Passport 24 Shakespeare in Performance 27 Black Pioneers 23 Northern Kayenta Region 26 Mazzaoui, Safavid Iran and Her Sherman Alexie 22 Blueprints 27 Geological Evolution of the Colorado Neighbors 18 Shifting Borders and a Tattered Passport Braje, Modern Oceans, Ancient Seas 26 Plateau of Eastern Utah and Western McCarthy, The Turk in America 25 24 Colorado 23 McConvell/Keen/Hendery, Kinship Shrinking Jungle 21 California’s Channel Islands 13 Geology of the Parks, Monuments, and Systems 25 Silbernagel, Troubled Trails 24 Camp Floyd and the Mormons 24 Wildlands of Southern Utah, The 23 McCourt, Last of the Robber’s Roost Simms/Gohier, Traces of Fremont 26 Cannon, Charlotte’s Rose 27 Ghosts of Glen Canyon 23 Outlaws 23 Spangler, Nine Mile Canyon 19 Cannon/Neilson, To the Peripheries of Gingerich, In the Eastern Fluted Point McGuire et al., The Prehistory of Gold Studying Technological Change 26 Mormondom 24 Tradition 25 Butte 10 Swanson, The Bitterroot and Mr. Canyon of Dreams 5 Glen Canyon Country, The 26 McPherson, As If the Land Owned Us 22 Brandborg 24 Canyoneering the Northern San Rafael Glory Hunter 24 McPherson, Navajo Tradition, Mormon —, Dave Rust 24 Swell 22 Gravity Hill 20 Life 22 Symbiotic Antagonisms 25 Caplow/Cohen, Wildbranch 22 Gregory, Diary of Almon Harris McVey, The Way Home 22 Charlotte’s Rose 27 Thompson 23 Meetings at the Margins 26 The Prehistory of Gold Butte 10 Chelkowski, Reza Ali Khazeni Memorial Gregory/Darrah/Kelly, The Exploration Men at Work 27 To the Peripheries of Mormondom 24 Lectures in Iranian Studies: Volume of the Colorado River and the High Modern Oceans, Ancient Seas 26 Tony Hillerman’s Navajoland 22 Two 16 Plateaus of Utah 23 Moorman, Camp Floyd and the Mormons Traces of Fremont 26 Cheney, Plain but Wholesome 21 Ground Stone Analysis 12 24 Tracks in the Amazon 4 Clark/Clark, Opening Zion 22 Guardian Poplar, The 27 Mormons as Citizens of a Communist Traveler’s Guide to the Geology of the Cleaving an Unknown World 23 State 24 Colorado Plateau, A 23 I nde x Coles, Blueprints 27 Handley, Home Waters 22 Mountain Spirit 22 Troubled Trails 24 Compton, A Frontier Life 18 Harrison-Buck, Power and Identity in Turk in America, The 25 Corbett, Seven Summers 20 Archaeological Theory and Practice 26 Natural History of the Intermountain Turkish Foreign Policy 1919–2006 25 Crampton, Ghosts of Glen Canyon 23 Hatina, ʿUlamaʾ, Politics, and the Public West, A 22 25th Street Confidential 1 ‘Ulama’, Politics, and the Public Sphere Sphere 25 Navajo Tradition, Mormon Life 22 Two Toms 22 25 Henry Burkhardt and LDS Realpolitik in Neeleman/Neeleman, Tracks in the Dance with the Bear 27 Communist East Germany 24 Amazon 4 ʿUlamaʾ, Politics, and the Public Sphere Darrah/Chamberlin/Kelly, The Hole in the Ground with a Liar at the Neilson, Early Mormon Missionary 25 Exploration of the Colorado River in Top, A 23 Activities in Japan, 1901–1924 24 1869 and 1871–1872 23 Holley, 25th Street Confidential 1 Nels Anderson’s World War I Diary 19 Vierra, From Mountain Top to Valley Dave Rust 24 Home Waters 22 New Essays on Clint Eastwood 27 Bottom 8 David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern Homer, On the Way to Somewhere Nine Mile Canyon 19 Mormonism 24 Else 27 Northern Paiute—Bannock Dictionary War and Diplomacy 25 DeCourten, Dinosaurs of Utah 2 Horses of the West 17 22 War and Nationalism 25 DeJong, Forced to Abandon Our Hughes, Perspectives on Prehistoric Trade Waring, A Natural History of the Fields 22 and Exchange in the Great Basin 26 On the Way to Somewhere Else 27 Intermountain West 22 Des Lauriers, Island of Fogs 26 Opening Zion 22 Warner, The Domínguez-Escalante DeVoto, The Selected Letters of Bernard In the Eastern Fluted Point Tradition 25 Oran, Turkish Foreign Policy 1919–2006 Journal 23 DeVoto and Katharine Sterne 21 Index to the History of the Patriarchs of 25 Way Home, The 22 Diary of Almon Harris Thompson 23 the Coptic Church, An 25 Ortman, Winds from the North 27 Webb, Lost Canyons of the Green Dinosaurs of Utah 2 Island of Fogs 26 River 23 Doğan/Sharkey, American Missionaries Paleoindian Lifeways of the Cody Weiss, The Search for God’s Law 25 and the Middle East 25 Jacobson et al., Revisiting Thomas F. Complex 25 Werner, Gravity Hill 20 Domínguez-Escalante Journal, The 23 O’Dea’s The Mormons 24 Parezo/Janetski, Archaeology in the Where the Earth and Sky Are Sewn Jazwa/Perry, California’s Channel Great Basin and Southwest 14 Together 26 Early Mormon Missionary Activities in Islands 13 People of the Water 27 White Hat, Life’s Journey— Zuya 22 Japan, 1901–1924 24 John Muir 23 Perspectives on Prehistoric Trade and White-Bearded Plainsman, A 26 Eiselt, Becoming White Clay 26 Johnson & Johnson, Two Toms 22 Exchange in the Great Basin 26 White/Surface-Evans, Least Cost Analysis Eliason/Mould, Latter-day Lore 7 Jones, Shrinking Jungle 21 Peterson, C., The Guardian Poplar 27 of Social Landscapes 27 Engberg/Wesling, John Muir 23 Juanita Brooks 24 Peterson, L., Juanita Brooks 24 Engel, New Essays on Clint Eastwood 27 Plain but Wholesome 21 Wildbranch 22 Ephrat/Hatina, Religious Knowledge, Kadıoğlu/Keyman, Symbiotic Plazak, A Hole in the Ground with a Liar Winds from the North 27 Authority, and Charisma 15 Antagonisms 25 at the Top 23 Wood, A White-Bearded Plainsman 26 Essays on Genocide and Humanitarian Keller, The Lady in the Ore Bucket 24 Powell, Nels Anderson’s World War I Whittlesey, Lost in Yellowstone 23 Intervention 25 Kemmerer, Primate People 25 Diary 19 Yavuz/Blumi, War and Nationalism 25 Exploration of the Colorado River and the Kinship Systems 25 Power and Identity in Archaeological Yavuz/Sluglett, War and Diplomacy 25 High Plateaus of Utah, The 23 Knell/Muñiz, Paleoindian Lifeways of the Theory and Practice 26 Exploration of the Colorado River in 1869 Cody Complex 25 Prentiss, Field Seasons 26 and 1871–1872, The 23 Kornfeld, The First Rocky Mountaineers Primate People 25 11 Prince/Wright, David O. McKay and the Field Seasons 26 KUED, Horses of the West 17 Rise of Modern Mormonism 24

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