"Martha Louise Hipp's Sovereign Schools candidly illustrates, through exhaustive research and oral interviews, the resiliency of the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho Tribal Nations."—Cynthia Landrum, Middle West Reviews
"Sovereign Schools definitely belongs on the shelf of students of Indian history and the struggle for self-determination. Martha Louise Hipp ably gives the reader a front row seat to observe this effort."—Kenneth Zontek, Annals of Wyoming
"This is a case study that informs and inspires."—Bob Clark, Roundup Magazine
“Taking readers through the rocky terrain of state and federal government politics on matters of Indians in general and those specifically related to the Northern Arapaho on the Wind River reservation, Martha Hipp masterfully blends historical and personal accounts of Arapahos who, though scarred by Anglocentric government policies, persevered to assert their sovereignty in establishing their schools.”—Neyooxet Greymorning, professor of anthropology and Native American studies at the University of Montana
“I am reminded of the struggles, obstacles, barriers, and economic racism that the founders of Wyoming Indian High School endured; this only made them more determined to achieve their goal to establish a public high school. The grassroots effort of the Native community followed its own path to self-determination at Wind River.”—W. Patrick Goggles, former Wyoming state representative and former chairman of the Wyoming Indian School Board