"Stephens . . . is among the first scholars to tap Spanish and Mexican archives for primary sources on Huichol history. Using both documentary and published sources, she weaves a concise, accessible narrative of the Huichol from the conquest to the present day, paying particular attention to their resistance to missionizing and continual dogged defense of their lands in times of peace and war. Stephens highlights the paradox of Huichol indigenous identity: the fact that a people perennially fractured by political and local identities might still so successfully maintain their ethnic identity and autonomy. There is no better single introduction to the study of Huichol history."—P.R. Sullivan, Choice
"This is an interesting study for anybody interested in the history of Mexico, Latin America, and the native people around the world, and in particular the Huichol."—Anna Faktorovich, Pennsylvania Literary Journal
"Fluidly written and accessible."—Zachary Brittsan, American Historical Review
"This is an important addition to the scholarship on interactions between indigenous peoples and the state in peripheral regions."—Leslie S. Offutt, Hispanic American Historical Review
“A much-needed addition to the scholarship on the Huichol and on indigenous peoples in Mexico more generally. Unlike most studies of indigenous peoples, In the Lands of Fire and Sun effectively spans the colonial and modern periods, demonstrating the incredible continuity in Huichol resistance and adaptation. . . . It will be an excellent choice for single-semester surveys of Mexican history as well as upper-division and graduate courses in history, anthropology, and indigenous studies.”—Andrae Marak, dean of the College of Arts and Science at Governors State University
“McArdle Stephens delivers carefully measured arguments in prose that is at once vivid, reflective, and a pleasure to read. . . . In the Lands of Fire and Sun is ethnohistory as it should be: acutely sensitive to local detail while casting a sophisticated gaze on the politics of a changing world.”—Raphael Folsom, associate professor of history at the University of Oklahoma and author of The Yaquis and the Empire: Violence, Spanish Imperial Power, and Native Resilience in Colonial Mexico