On the Border with Crook is a definitive firsthand chronicle of the Indian Wars, tracing General George Crook's campaigns from Arizona's Tonto Basin to the 1876-77 northern plains. Shaped from field diaries, Bourke's prose splices brisk operational reportage with topographical precision and ethnographic notice, portraying scouts, soldiers, and Native leaders with rare sympathy. Logistics, intelligence-gathering, and the moral costs of irregular war receive as much weight as battle action, culminating in sober accounts of the Rosebud and hard desert marches. John Gregory Bourke-Civil War veteran and Medal of Honor recipient, a West Point-trained officer, and Crook's aide-de-camp from 1871-brought linguistic skill and scientific curiosity to the frontier. His notebooks underwrote later ethnographies and inform this volume's detail on Apache and Lakota lifeways. Intimacy with headquarters decisions and skepticism toward the Indian Bureau enrich his candid portraits of policy, command, and corruption. Essential for students of the American West and military history, this primary source pairs vivid storytelling with durable insight. Readers interested in leadership, logistics, and cross-cultural encounter-from classrooms to general audiences-will find Bourke's account both authoritative and arrestingly humane. Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable-distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.
Autorentext
John Gregory Bourke (1846 - 1896) was a captain in the United States Army and a prolific diarist and postbellum author; he wrote several books about the American Old West, including ethnologies of its indigenous peoples. He was awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions while a cavalryman in the Union Army during the American Civil War. Based on his service during the war, his commander nominated him to West Point, where he graduated in 1869, leading to service as an Army officer until his death.