
NELSON, S.D.
Sitting Bull: Lakota Warrior and Defender of His People. illus. by S.D. Nelson. 64p. bibliog. chron. index. maps. notes. photos. Abrams. Nov. 2015. RTE $19.95. ISBN 9781419707315. LC 2014045761. Gr 4-6–Sitting Bull witnessed great changes in the lives of Native Americans during his lifetime (1831–90). Nelson, an enrolled member of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe in the Dakotas, presents Sitting Bull’s life as an entry point into that period of history. A detailed time line and author’s note reflect extensive research and a depth of understanding about the topic. The book is engagingly told in the first person, with Sitting Bull describing his childhood training to be a warrior and a hunter. White people had been in the area for many years, but increased westward expansion and the decision to build forts brought the tensions among the various Native groups and white settlers and soldiers to a higher level. The book does not attempt to present all sides of the issue but instead concentrates on what happened to the Hunkpapa people and other Sioux groups and the pivotal battles of Killdeer Mountain, Rosebud Creek, and Little Bighorn. Although Sitting Bull was illiterate and did not leave memoirs, Nelson’s choice to use the man’s voice will draw in readers and give the events a sense of immediacy. The book is visually appealing, combining art inspired by ledger book art style (a note explains that American Indians incarcerated on military bases sometimes were given discarded books in which to draw) with period photographs and quotations, demonstrating the intersection of two cultures in a tangible manner. Though the images aren’t overly graphic, they do depict death and violence (one picture includes a small detail of George Custer shooting himself in the head).
VERDICT Not a typical report book, this portrait of a committed leader provides a unique perspective on the man and his time period.
–Lucinda Snyder Whitehurst, St. Christopher’s School, Richmond, VA This review was published in School Library Journal’s September 2015 issue.
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