“As with his wonderful Song of Dewey Beard, Philip Burnham focuses on a single remarkable man, in this case Clarence Three Stars, boarding school graduate, educator, resolute advocate, and seat-of-the-pants lawyer, to trace the experience of the Lakota people as they grappled with the challenges faced after their confinement to reservations. Three Stars’s life is a vivid revelation of their story, one of determination and cultural courage, an underappreciated chapter in the American experience.”—Elliott West, author of Continental Reckoning: The American West in the Age of Expansion
“Clarence Three Stars left Pine Ridge and joined the first class to enter Carlisle Indian Industrial School and returned home to a strange and different place. Through the eyes of ‘one of Pratt’s boys’ and with engaging prose, Philip Burnham traces Three Stars’s pioneering journey in his own homeland as he readjusted and traversed the shifting reservation terrain that neither his cultural past nor Carlisle education fully prepared him for. In his search for his place in a new world, Three Stars became a government teacher, a store owner, a fee patent rancher, a Bennett County state’s attorney, a family man, and a leader for a new generation. Burnham tells his important story in this engaging tribal biography that is truly an important American epic.”—Richmond L. Clow, author of Spotted Tail: Warrior and Statesman