"Boarding School Voices is a much-needed addition to the scholarship on Carlisle that has appeared in recent years. By accounting for the successes and the frustrations that Carlisle graduates dealt with, Krupat's study is a testament to their stunning endurance, adaptations, innovations, and mobility. It extends the crucial work of Dickinson College's archivists to make this rich archive of Indigenous writing accessible, while offering a useful model for how to contextualize and interpret Indigenous writings that emerged from American Indian boarding schools. For any reader exploring these understudied archives, Boarding School Voices is an indispensable work."—Frank Kelderman, American Historical Review
"Students of the boarding school era in particular may find Boarding School Voices to be a wonderful research companion, with its straightforward contribution, powerful photographs, and accessible writing—replete with a helpful appendix of those referenced by name in the book."—Sarah Whitt, American Indian Culture and Research Journal
"This is a highly valuable book for those who are interested in boarding schools, labor, allotment, federal policy, Indigenous agency, and family history."—Savannah Waters, South Dakota History
"Krupat's work stands as a significant contribution to our understanding of Carlisle, its students, and American Indian boarding schools."—Geoff Hamilton, American Indian Quarterly
"This work gives new perspectives to the Native American boarding school era and a rare glimpse in the linguistic development of English in Indigenous cultures. The voices of the Carlisle Indian Industrial School graduates are illuminated by the preservation of these letters and, in turn, they open opportunities for expanding this field of study beyond historical accounts."—Meghan Nguyen, Chronicles of Oklahoma
“Recovering the Native American voices in this book is an important undertaking to understanding Native American intellectualism and activism in the long history between the nineteenth century and today. . . . Boarding School Voices is written in such a readable way that any [person] simply curious about Native American history and literary production may be interested in reading it.”—Lionel Larré, editor of Tales of the Old Indian Territory and Essays on the Indian Condition
“The letters and other student-authored texts this book makes accessible are an untapped resource for scholars and students working to challenge the restrictive assimilationist-resistance binary that has dominated narratives of the boarding school experience.”—Jacqueline Emery, editor of Recovering Native American Writings in the Boarding School Press