"d'Oney has provided a fresh and urgently needed narrative of Houma survivance that forces readers to look more critically at the racial and historical assumptions that ground federal Indian policies."—Elizabeth Ellis, Journal of Southern History
“Based on comprehensive research and written in a highly accessible manner, this much-needed study of the Houma Indians will contribute markedly to scholarship on Native Americans in the South. D’Oney’s explanation of Houma resilience and persistence adds plenty to our knowledge of the place and the people. D’Oney has produced a work that many other historians will find useful in their own scholarship as well as in their classrooms.”—Daniel Usner, author of American Indians in the Lower Mississippi Valley: Social and Economic Histories