CHARLES M. ROBINSON III is a history instructor at South Texas College. He has written more than fifteen books, including Bad Hand: A Biography of General Ranald S. Mackenzie and The Court Martial of Lieutenant Henry Flipper. He lives in San Benito, Texas.
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"Bourke includes firsthand reports on Crook's battles with the Sioux at the Powder River Fight (March 1876) and the Battle of the Rosebud (June 1876). Despite Army claims to the contrary, neither of these encounters was a victory for the troops, and at the Rosebud, historians generally agree that Crook was defeated. The Custer disaster took place a week after the Rosebud battle. . . . This reviewer is pleased to return once more to Robinson's intelligently edited and annotated version of Bourke's diaries. As a reporter, Bourke was unsurpassed in his attention to detail and his ability to remember and repeat anecdotes."--Journal of America's Military Past "This is an enormous contribution to our understanding of the American West."--Robert Wooster, author of The Military and United States Indian Policy, 1865-1903 "Bourke's writings are keenly insightful, filled with color, and replete with a Who's Who of the American West and Old Army."--Paul L. Hedren, author of Fort Laramie and the Great Sioux War "The Bourke diaries are of great significance to the fields of Western American history and of Native American Studies. They are an unparalleled source on the internal operations of the Indian-fighting army and on ethnohistorical information on the tribes that Bourke came to know."--Joseph Porter, author of Paper Medicine Man "This is a must for the library of everyone interested in the Indians and the military frontier."--Paul A. Hutton, author of Phil Sheridan and His Army