“[Knack’s] focus on interethnic issues puts Boundaries Between on the summit of current ethnohistory: it does not get any better.”—Utah Historical Quarterly
“This excellent work describes how the flexible Southern Paiutes have maintained boundaries between themselves and various groups of outsiders for more than two centuries, while at the same time crossing these boundaries to take advantage of the possibilities afforded by the newcomers.”—American Historical Review
“Outstanding work. Twenty-eight years ‘in the field’ and in some of the U.S.’s most prestigious research libraries have yielded definitive ethnohistorical information.”—Choice
"Knack's book makes a valuable and readable contribution to the history of that region and to the literature on ethnic boundary maintenance."—Robert Bee, The Journal of American History
"Knack's elegant study is the definitive work on Southern Paiutes and a major contribution to the theory of ethnohistory and cultural exchange."—Marcia Clouser, Journal of the West
"This is the combination that we need to assure the continued vitality of ethnohistory. An ethnohistorical work must be good ethnography and it must be good history. Martha Knack has done both and has completed the task with insightful interpretation that helps soften the "boundaries between" ethnology and history."—James Goss, Western Historical Quarterly
“Boundaries Between is an insightful, thoroughly researched, and well-written ethnohistory that . . . should have broad appeal to scholars who are interested in Indian/non-Indian relations in western North America. . . . Having spent more than twenty-five years of her career studying the Southern Paiute, Martha Knack has established herself as a leading authority on the ethnohistory of this Numic-speaking group.”—Brooke S. Arkush, Ethnohistory
“In this groundbreaking study of Southern Paiute ethnohistory, Martha Knack provides a direly needed corrective to such marginalization. . . . A landmark achievement in Great Basin ethnohistory. It should become a standard reference, an essential starting point for scholars interested in this poorly understood region of the American West.”—Ned Blackhawk, New Mexico Historical Review