In this unorthodox and intriguing book, William Turkel uses the Chilcotin Plateau, an arid and sparsely settled region of west-central British Columbia, to ask a series of questions about how we acquire and use knowledge of the past.
... This is an engaging and rewarding book. Like much recent work in British Columbia history, it writes First Nations people into the general history of the province, a hugely important project for North American histroy more generally.
An amalgam of the material and the representational, the natural and the human, place allows Turkel to move some way toward transcending the old human-environment dichotomy that bedevils the writing of environmental history.
-- James Murton * Environmental History Journal, Volume 12, Number 4 *Foreword: Putting Things in Their Place / Graeme Wynn
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part 1: Deep Time in the Present
1 Fish Lake
2 Prosperity Gold
Part 2: The Horizon of Experience
3 Mackenzie
4 Grease Trails
Part 3: Shadowed Ground
5 Converging towards Banshee
6 Chilcotin War
Afterword
Appendices
Glossary; Notes; Toponymic Index; General Index