"These stories present strong people resolved to maintain their connections to one another, their community, and the land that shaped them."—M. F. McClure, Choice
“Taking the reader to the heart of Kiowa country in southwestern Oklahoma, Benjamin Kracht shares the life stories of a Kiowa mother and her son with sensitivity, grace, and great respect for the old ways. These intergenerational stories recall the warmth of a grandmother’s kitchen, beadwork, boarding school days, hunting, fishing, and baseball.”—Patricia Loughlin, author of Hidden Treasures of the American West
“Benjamin Kracht delivers a duo of rich memoirs written by mother and son Henrietta Apayyat and Raymond Tongkeamha. Placed together with Kracht’s own notes and historic contextualization, the memoirs provide resonant details about Kiowa culture and history that shine through recollections about place, kinship, friendship, hardship, and fun. The memoirs also reveal much about education, medicine, religion, technological change, and ethnic interactions in twentieth-century Kiowa country. Kracht clearly has a genuine respect and love for the Tongkeamhas, a family who has shared much with him and, in return, whose voices he has diligently worked to share.”—J. Justin Castro, author of Radio in Revolution: Wireless Technology and State Power in Mexico, 1897–1938
“Editor Benjamin R. Kracht provides a rich resource for anyone interested in Kiowa or, more generally, Southern Plains American Indian culture and history. Through the stories of Henrietta Tongkeamha and Raymond Tongkeamha, and with help from Lisa LaBrada, this personal, community-based history delivers as an important primary source and a superb addition not only to the scholarly record but also to Native American oral histories.”—David C. Posthumus, author of All My Relatives: Exploring Lakota Ontology, Belief, and Ritual