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  • SD State Historical society press A Phantom Storm

A Phantom Storm

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Winner of the 2025 John M. Carroll Literary Award for "Best Book on Custer and his Times," presented by the Little Big Horn Associates Winner of the Silver Medal—2025 Will Rogers Medallion Award for Western Nonfiction

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In the fall of 1890, a new religion swept onto the Sioux reservations like a prairie fire. The Ghost Dance, as it was called, promised that if American Indians would dance and pray, a Messiah would deliver them from the misery of reservation life. The movement was soon trumpeted as a new Indian war in the making by those who refused to see it as the lament of a downtrodden people.

At the center of the controversy was Sitting Bull, the Hunkpapa Lakota chieftain and medicine man who was relentlessly villainized as “Custer’s assassin.” In reservation life he had become a staunch opponent of federal Indian policy, and when he refused to forswear the movement, even if he did not openly embrace it, his enemies tarred him as a crazed malcontent. Ambitious generals, self-righteous Indian Agents, reservation rivals, unscrupulous reporters, and self-serving politicians were determined to suppress the Ghost Dance and arrest Sitting Bull as the new religion’s alleged ringleader—resulting in a double tragedy for the Lakotas.

In A Phantom Storm, Norman Matteoni deftly traces the smear campaign against Sitting Bull in the words and actions of public figures and the nation’s media. The resulting narrative reveals the previously unexplored manipulation of public perceptions by those seeking to gain from the demise of Sitting Bull and all that he represented.

About the author: Norman E. Matteoni earned a B.A. from the University of Santa Clara and his J.D. from Notre Dame Law School. He is a lawyer, legal author, and lecturer on the law of eminent domain. His interest in the dispossession of the Oceti Sakowin influenced his studies on the U.S. government's annexation of the Black Hills. He is the author of Condemnation Practice in California, the comprehensive book on that subject, as well as Prairie Man: The Struggle between Sitting Bull and Indian Agent James McLaughlin.

Image description: The cover features a portrait of Sitting Bull on the right. To the left, there's a historical drawing depicting a scene possibly related to the Ghost Dance Movement. The title is printed at the top of the cover; the subtitle and author's name are printed to the left below the historical drawing. 

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