Description
Blood, guts, dust and hatred: the real history of the American West. Today is a Good Day to Fight covers the period from the initial penetration of the region by settlers and prospectors in the 1840s until the end of the Indian Wars in the 1890s. It explains the history of white-Indian conflict from the military point of view, showing how the United States used its army to wage terrible wars of conquest upon Native American peoples in order to take the land from them and enrich the growing nation, and how the Indians never really stood a chance in trying to defend their homelands. Highlighting the fractious and bitter relations between tribes unable and unwilling to unite in time to stave off their common enemy, it tries to portray the utter bitterness of the conflict between white and Indian, and how both sides resorted to increasingly foul acts of war and slaughter as the conflict progressed. A dirty, underhanded and scrappy conflict, the outrages committed by both sides fuelled bitterness and resentment that still exists in America today.
About the Author
Dr Mark Felton is the author of over two dozen history books, including several bestsellers, and regularly appears on television and radio. He holds a PhD in Native American-white relations in nineteenth-century North America. In 2011, Today is a Good Day to Fight was used as a central source for Melvyn Bragg's BBC In Our Time documentary 'Custer's Last Stand'. He lives in Norwich.
Reviews
Today is a Good Day to Fight shows how the United States of America was born of an abomination, one which it remains implacable in refusing to address.
A no-holds barred book ... successfully strips away the myths that may still govern Western minds.
Book Information
ISBN 9780750988902
Author Dr Mark Felton
Format Paperback
Imprint The History Press Ltd
Publisher The History Press Ltd