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The last battle of the American Indian Wars did not end at a place
called Wounded Knee.
From Window Rock to Lodge Grass and the Anza Valley,
new Indian wars are being fought by a legion of Ivy League-trained
lawyers called Coyote Warriors — among them a Mandan attorney
named Raymond Cross.
"Coyote Warrior is compelling,
outrageous, triumphant..."
— Debra Krol (Salinan/Esselen), Native Peoples Magazine
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When Congress seized the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara
homelands at the end of World War II, tribal chairman Martin
Cross, the great-grandson of chiefs who fed and sheltered Lewis
and Clark through the bitter cold winter of 1804, waged an epic
but losing battle against the federal government. As floodwaters
rose behind the massive shoulders of Garrison Dam, Raymond, the
youngest of Martin's ten children, was growing up in a shack
with dirt floors and no plumbing or electricity, wearing clothes
made from flour sacks. By the time he was six, his people were
scattered to the slums in a dozen distant cities. Raymond ended
up on the West Coast. Far from the homeland of their ancestors,
he and his siblings would hear that their father had died alone
and broken on the windswept prairie of North Dakota.
At his father's graveside, Raymond discovered the
solitary path he was destined to follow. After Stanford and Yale
Law, he returned to the land of his ancestors to take up his
father's fight against the federal government. Raymond's remarkable
journey led him back to the same U.S. Congress his father battled
forty years before and into the hallowed chambers of the U.S.
Supreme Court.
In the tradition of A Civil Action, and
J. Anthony Lukas's Common Ground, Coyote Warrior tells
the epic story of the three tribes that saved the Corps of Discovery
from starvation, their century-long battle to forge a new nation,
and the extraordinary journey of one man to redeem a father's
dream — and the dignity of his people.
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