Skip to content
Scan a barcode
Scan
Hardcover Dreamers: On the Trail of the Nez Perce Book

ISBN: 0870043935

ISBN13: 9780870043932

Dreamers: On the Trail of the Nez Perce

Stevens Pass always has had an aura of mystery about it. Even while Seattle boomed during the great gold rush of the 1800s, there was no way to cross the formidable North Cascade Mountains. Inspired... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

$9.19
Save $15.76!
List Price $24.95
Almost Gone, Only 1 Left!
Save to List

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

My favorite book about the Nez Perce.

I have been a huge fan of the Nez Perce people and their native land ever since I was a child. I grew up in Boise, Idaho, not too far away from the Nez Perce land, and as a boy I remember listening in fascination as my father told me the story of the sad plight of the non-treaty Nez Perce. Decades later, as an adult who suddenly took an interest in reading, I began studying and researching their story myself. Of supreme importance to me in learning the story of the Nez Perce people was understanding their land and their love of that land. When I read the histories I wanted deeper, more detailed descriptions of the land that they lived in and the trails that they followed. None of the histories quite gave me all the information I wanted. So, I took off traveling through their country and over their trails to experience it first hand. Finally, I heard about this book, and I hoped that maybe it might be the book I had been looking for. I was not disappointed. Dreamers is the book I wish I had written because the author took the time to take the trip I have often wished I could take, traveling the entire length of the Nez Perce National Historic Trail, researching it and studying it all along the way as he recorded his personal thoughts about events that occurred there. As pointed out elsewhere, Dreamers is part travelogue and part historical account. This format is obviously not going to appeal to everyone. In fact, I may be one of a very small minority of people who truly appreciate it. But, for me, this book was fantastic.

Highly recommended and completely absorbing

Really 4 1/2 stars... This book weaves together history and one man's interesting journey following the historic Nez Perce Trail established during their courageous 1877 retreat towards Montana and then Canada. Stadius carefully studied McWhorter's notes and adds a few interesting details and quotes overlooked by other historians. My only complaints are 1) the editing could have been a little better; and 2) Stadius misstates Crazy Horse's death date by one day too early and wrongly states that an Indian policeman stabbed him with a bayonet. These observations aside, this book was very touching (part history and part human interest) and I highly recommend it.

On the road with Stadius

Dreamers is an excellent account of the Nez Perce flight for freedom as they are chased by all the stars of the American military. Beginning with Gen. Howard (infamous already for the disaster at Chancellorsville during the Civil War, cameo appearances are made by Gens. Sherman, Sheridan, and Miles. Stadius retraces the path of the Nez Perce from the Willowas, to the Battle at Whitebird, and then the run through the Idaho Panhandle into Montana, through Yellowstone and back up trough Montana. There is a balanced mix of personal accounts of civilians, soldiers, and Nez Perce that makes this a rich historical account. This, coupled with Stadius's own journal account of retracing the Nez Perce Trail and how it looks today makes this a most enjoyable book. It reminds me of William Frassanito's style of taking old Brady photographs and determining exactly where they were taken by revisiting the sites. The reliance on written and oral histories and Stadius's gift of describing the terrain and geography enlivens this book, to the point that I am already planning stages of traveling over parts of this trail. Occasionally Stadius will inject some of his opinions, but overall I most appreciated the contrast of experience from participants and not some attempt at political correctness or personal sermonizing. History as it should be written is what Dreamers is most about. It starts slow, but after Howard starts pursuing across the Lolo pass, I couldn't put it down. I bought this book at the U. of Idaho bookstore when the author was doing a signing, let it sit on the shelf for 7 months, and finally stuck it in my brief case to read on a cross country flight. The return flight has never seemed so short. I highly recommend this book.

With a library and knapsack in his VW microbus . . .

Martin Stadius has put together a narrative of travel along the Nez Perce trail, and through the stacks of books and articles that have been written about that episode in US history. He navigates both trails well. His blend of personal narrative and historical analysis does a good job of sorting facts from myths, and offers often compelling description of the landscape.Some of what I like about this book: Stadius took some good pictures along the route and put them in this book. He spent the obligatory time in Pullman, Washington poring through the McWhorter papers. He listened well to one of the most knowledgeable people alive today concerning the Nez Perce war--Otis Halfmoon, National Park Service Ranger--and gives a good description of that Nez Perce man's storytelling ability. He reveals a sense of ethics in his exploration of places and sources. He recognizes the incompetence of the would-be poachers he saw fishing in a "no fishing" section of Yellowstone Park.My first thought when I saw this book was that it would be another urbanite's tour through Indian country (like Ian Frazier's _On the Rez_). But as Stadius follows the Nez Perce trail, he deftly weaves together natural history, perceptive observation, good manners, and an inquisitive spirit tempered by respect for the sacred. His prose keeps running smoothly in a manner akin to his miracle bus because he's willing to get out and wade a creek before attempting to drive through, and knows his limits. That scene from the book could stand as a metaphor for his journeys through the pasts and places along the Nez Perce trail.This book will not have the enduring power of McWhorter's accounts that are based on first hand testimony. But in our time it is one of the better books on the subject.

Following The Trail

I reccomend this book for any one wanting to learn more about the Nez Perce Trail. I found this book very interesting.I have driven parts of the trail myself and found this book to be so factual. The authors respect for the Native American Culture shines through. It is a very interesting book of historical importance. I found myself reading the book with a road Atlas by my side.
Copyright © 2026 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks ® and the ThriftBooks ® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured