[ A] readable and insightful work.Christoph Strobel, Western Historical Quarterly
In this dramatic narrative peopled with an extraordinary cast of larger than life characters, Andrew Offenburger manages to weave together African, U.S., Mexican, and Indigenous history into a devastating portrait of the dark underside of global capitalist expansion during the Gilded Age."Karl Jacoby, author of The Strange Career of William Ellis: The Texas Slave Who Became a Mexican Millionaire
Andrew Offenburger provides a smart, engaging, and revealing examination of the connectedness of the western U.S., northern Mexico, and Southern Africa through the ideas and actions of capitalists, adventurers, missionaries, and indigenous peoples from 1880-1920. In doing so, he prompts us to think broadly and creatively about the parameters of both the Global West and the Gilded Age, as well as the social Darwinistic frontier ideology that connected the British and American Empires. David Wrobel, author of Americas West: A History, 1890-1950