The whites want war & we will give it to them
- Sitting Bull. This is the archetypal story of the American West. Whether it is cast as a tale of unmatched bravery in the face of impossible odds or of insane arrogance receiving its rightful comeuppance Custers Last Stand continues to captivate the imagination. Nathaniel Philbrick brilliantly reconstructs the build-up to the Battle of the Little Big Horn through to the final eruption of violence. Two legendary figures dominate the events: George Armstrong Custer & Sitting Bull. No longer the fresh-faced Boy-General of the Civil War Custer was now mired in financial professional & political problems. A clear & just cause had been replaced by ambiguity & frustration
- by ill-fated efforts at peace treaties treachery & compromises on both sides. Forced to take to the plains to feed themselves & increasingly outraged by the governments policies towards them the Sioux & Cheyenne became infused with a new sense of collective identity & purpose. Between six & eight thousand people came together in the largest ever gathering of Native Americans. If the government should be foolish enough to pursue them they would stand & fight. Sitting Bull was in his mid-forties His charisma & political savvy had enabled him to emerge as their leader. A vision he received during a Sun Dance
- of soldiers falling from the sky
- was widely understood to presage a great victory. Nathaniel Philbrick brings vividly to life all those involved
- from the Oglala Sioux warrior Crazy Horse & Major Marcus Reno who led the first attack to Libby Custer waiting with the other army wives at Fort Lincoln. He evokes too the history geography & haunting beauty of the Great Plains & provides the finest account to date of what happened there
- & why
- at the end of June 1876.