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Cochise: The Life and Times of the Great Apache Chief
 
 
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Cochise: The Life and Times of the Great Apache Chief [Hardcover]

Peter Aleshire (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0471383635 978-0471383635 August 3, 2001
Praise for Peter Aleshire?s The Fox and the Whirlwind

"Superbly crafted." --Dallas Morning News

"Offers a refreshing approach to understanding the Apache wars, allowing readers to grasp the conflict from multiple perspectives." --Library Journal

"An invaluable addition to western history." --Evans Connell, Author of Son of the Morning Star

"Written like fine historical fiction, but substantial, substantive, enlightening." &mdashKirkus Reviews

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Customers buy this book with Major Problems in American Indian History: Documents and Essays (Major Problems in American History (Wadsworth)) $72.97

Cochise: The Life and Times of the Great Apache Chief + Major Problems in American Indian History: Documents and Essays (Major Problems in American History (Wadsworth))


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

The Chiricahua Apache leader Cochise (1804?-1874), as nearly every American officer who faced him would testify, was an ingenious tactician and a ferocious warrior. He was also, in historian Peter Aleshire's account, a far-seeing politician and careful diplomat who balanced dedication for preserving his people's homeland with genuine efforts to keep the peace with the invading Americans who arrived in Arizona in the mid 19th century.

Renowned though he was, Cochise did not attract biographers in his own lifetime, and chroniclers preserved only a few of his words. Concerned to present Cochise's life from an Apache point of view, Aleshire draws on the ethnographic and historical literature to imagine what Cochise might have been thinking and saying as he unified scattered bands of Apaches to fend off encroaching gold miners and interlopers such as the greenhorn army lieutenant George Bascom ("only a boy, not far out of baby grass, his whiskers soft and his face smooth"), whose insulting manner led to a bloody war that would take hundreds of lives and last for many years, not ending until long after Cochise's death.

From a purely historical point of view, Aleshire's reconstructions are impossibly speculative; he admits as much, opening his book by confessing his "sins against historiography." Still, his "seminovelistic" approach is convincing and effective, and he offers a vivid picture of a great warrior and hero. --Gregory McNamee

From Library Journal

The great Apache leader Cochise waged a number of brilliantly successful campaigns in the southwestern Indian wars from the 1850s to 1872, when he negotiated a peace. Edwin Sweeney's Cochise: Chiricahua Apache Chief (LJ 5/1/91) is a very well done if conventional book about Cochise and his people. Aleshire (American studies, Arizona State Univ.; The Fox and the Whirlwind) has written not a conventional biography but something more resembling historical fiction. While paying tribute to Sweeney's "definitive" biography, Aleshire says that he was moved to write a "seminovelistic narration" in order to imagine something of what Cochise thought and felt during his various campaigns. Aleshire bases his creation on varied sources, including anthropological research conducted among the Apache in the early 1900s, when there were still people living who recalled Cochise. Aleshire's sources are documented in the chapter notes at the end of the book. A work like this is inevitably speculative and in the end seems somewhat unsatisfactory, being neither novel nor biography but something in between if there is such a place. Any library interested in Cochise should have Sweeny's book; this title is optional. Charlie Cowling, SUNY at Brockport Lib.
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley (August 3, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0471383635
  • ISBN-13: 978-0471383635
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.1 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,089,941 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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24 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars This book is bad!, November 10, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Cochise: The Life and Times of the Great Apache Chief (Hardcover)
I have to admit that I did not read the entire book. I started skimming through it, and was completely shocked by several errors on the basic historical facts. Such errors in a book such as this are inexcusable, and reflect poorly on both the author and his editor.

First, the author refers to the removal of the Navajo tribe to "Bosque Redondo" "on the banks of the Rio Grande." As any historian of the Southwest knows, or certainly should know, Bosque Redondo was near Ft. Sumner, New Mexico, on the banks of the PECOS RIVER, not the Rio Grande River. Such an error is just pitiful.

Second, in one footnote (n. 11, page 314), the author states that the Confederates "gathered their forces for the battle of Val Verde, where they failed to turn back a column of Union troops from Colorado. After this defeat, the Confederates abandoned New Mexico. . . ." As ANY historian of the Civil War in the Southwest would know, the battle of Valverde, south of Socorro, New Mexico, was a Confederate victory, not a defeat. As a result of that victory, the Confederates did not turn back and return to Texas; they marched right up the Rio Grande and captured Albuquerque and then the territorial capital of Santa Fe. It was later at the battle of Glorieta, not Valverde, that the Confederates met a column of soldiers from Colorado, and met with a defeat which caused them to abandon New Mexico.

I cannot believe that a book such as this could contain such basic errors. When I saw these errors, I put aside reading any more of this book since it was obvious that one could not read it with any confidence that it was based on historical accuracy. I returned the book to the bookstore for a refund.

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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars I was expecting a lot more from this., January 9, 2002
This review is from: Cochise: The Life and Times of the Great Apache Chief (Hardcover)
I at first thought it was daring for Aleshire to write this biography in the style of Sandoz's Crazy Horse. I soon found out that it was actually a big mistake.

For those not familiar with Sandoz's biography, she wrote it more in the style of a historical novel. Though it was based on extensive research, she chose to tell the story in the style in which Crazy Horse's Indian contemporaries might have told it. Also, in cases where there were different versions of events, she chose only one version, in order to keep the story flowing. I thought Aleshie daring to write in this style because, though I thought it worked well, Sandoz suffered much ridicule for it.

However, I found that this style did not lend itself very well to the subject of Cochise, for several reasons. First, the author simply did not know as much about Cochise as Sandoz did about Crazy Horse. For the sake of the story, for example, Aleshire assumes that Pisago Cabezon was Cochise's father. However, in a footnote he tells us that Cochise's father could have been one of three different people. So, when he later uses the murder of Cabezon as one of the motives for Cochise's hatred of the whites, it falls flat.

Also,like Sandoz with Crazy Horse, Aleshire tries to present Cochise as someone who meditates, and tries to "keep his mind smooth." However, if the author is correct, he also had an uncontrollable temper, and actually killed several members of his own band in anger. And despite the author's protests that warriors followed him out of respect for his achievements in battle, it sounded much more like he ruled out of fear. This would have made him highly unusual amongst Indian leaders. However, the author seems determined to gloss over this controversial topic.

THere also appears to be little of substance here. As this is the first book I've read on the Indians of the Southwest, I can't say whether it is due to lack of research, or a simple dearth of available information. I did note that the biography seemed to be based largely on secondary sources, and that there appeared to be little orignal research. There were also some really bad errors in some of the dates contained in the footnotes, though I assume this was an editing problem.

All in all, I was hoping for much more here, and I didn't get it.

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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Errors and ommissions make it not the best, February 15, 2008
Cochise is one of the most fascinating of the American Indian leaders. He lived a full life from 1804 to 1874 and saw the American West transformed, witnessing the Civil War, the destruction of other tribes and the gold rush. He was a brilliant fighter and mediator as Americans streamed into his Apache country. In his encounters with the American army he was able to evade capture by retreating to his stronghold in the Chirichua mountains.

However the highly popular novel-like style takes away from the history and basic mistakes regarding the battle of Val Verde and other historical errors means that the book's detail does not hold water for the novel-like style. Other biographies of Cochise such as Once They Moved Like The Wind : Cochise, Geronimo, And The Apache Wars, Cochise: Chiricahua Apache Chief (The Civilization of the American Indian, Vol. 204) provide more accurate detail and written in a different manner. Nevertheless this is an important contribution to the literature of Cochise.

Seth J. Frantzman
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The old world was destroyed by water, by a flood. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
White Eyes, Mangas Coloradas, Red Beard, Tatti Grande, Apache Pass, White Mountain, Fort Bowie, Ghost Dance, Great Father, Santa Rita del Cobre, Sierra Madre, White-Painted Woman, General Howard, Juan Jose, Agent Piper, Agent Drew, Merejildo Grijalva, Pinos Altos, Dragoon Springs, Happy Place, Old Man Owl, Santa Cruz, General Crook, James Kirker, Large Fruit
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