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Posted inReview

Wild West Book Review: Icons of the American West

by David Lauterborn3/28/2018
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Icons of the American West: From Cowgirls to Silicon Valley

edited by Gordon Morris Bakken, Greenwood Press, Westport, Conn., 2008, $175.

Noah Webster defined icon as “an object of uncritical devotion.” But don’t let that dissuade you from reading this two-volume set. Icons offers greater latitude than the term might suggest, profiling the good, the bad and even a few inanimate icons of the American West.

The books are pitched as a “port of entry” for students and researchers, and in that capacity they serve as a useful resource. The set opens with a timeline of Western history and closes with a selected bibliography. Each profile provides a shortlist of suggested further reading and is chockablock with dates and historic details, albeit to the detriment of the narrative in places. Visually driven readers should look elsewhere, as illustrations are limited to an opening portrait per profile.

Volume 1 covers the Old West, with requisite entries on Buffalo Bill, Custer and Geronimo alongside more surprising profiles. Kicking off the volume is an account of infamous Californio bandits, notably Joaquin Murieta and Tiburcio Vásquez, in which author-archivist Paul Spitzzeri questions the reinterpretation of such men as folk heroes, given the lack of historical documentation. Such objectivity is a welcome break from modern emotional revisionism.

Complementing a biography of John Muir are essays that relate the environmental wrangles over Yosemite and its neighboring valley, Muir’s beloved Hetch Hetchy. Despite Muir’s lobbying efforts and the support of Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft, Congress in 1913 authorized plans to dam Hetch Hetchy. The decision broke Muir, who died on December 24, 1914, a year after Woodrow Wilson signed the Raker Act, approving the reservoir.

Icons also gives Western women their due, though the preface preaches a bit on their role in the Old West. Profiles include a scholarly summary of Sacagawea’s story (“one that changes with the needs of the time”), a nod to cowboys and cowgirls (both rodeo and real-life) and a detailed account of Annie Oakley’s rise from Ohio farm girl to “Little Sure Shot” of Buffalo Bill’s Wild West fame.

Volume 2 picks up the action in the New West, profiling such disparate icons as Disneyland and Las Vegas, Ann Richards and Ronald Reagan.

 

Originally published in the February 2009 issue of Wild West. To subscribe, click here. 

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by David Lauterborn

David Lauterborn is the editor of Wild West and Military History. Over his four-decade publishing career he has shepherded some 300 magazine issues into print and written and posted thousands of articles. Among those are interviews with such historic figures as last surviving World War I doughboy Frank Buckles, Berlin Candy Bomber Gail Halvorsen and last surviving Doolittle Raider Dick Cole.

more by David Lauterborn

    Citation information

    David Lauterborn (11/20/2025) Wild West Book Review: Icons of the American West. HistoryNet Retrieved from https://www.historynet.com/wild-west-book-review-icons-american-west/.
    "Wild West Book Review: Icons of the American West."David Lauterborn - 11/20/2025, https://www.historynet.com/wild-west-book-review-icons-american-west/
    David Lauterborn 3/28/2018 Wild West Book Review: Icons of the American West., viewed 11/20/2025,<https://www.historynet.com/wild-west-book-review-icons-american-west/>
    David Lauterborn - Wild West Book Review: Icons of the American West. [Internet]. [Accessed 11/20/2025]. Available from: https://www.historynet.com/wild-west-book-review-icons-american-west/
    David Lauterborn. "Wild West Book Review: Icons of the American West." David Lauterborn - Accessed 11/20/2025. https://www.historynet.com/wild-west-book-review-icons-american-west/
    "Wild West Book Review: Icons of the American West." David Lauterborn [Online]. Available: https://www.historynet.com/wild-west-book-review-icons-american-west/. [Accessed: 11/20/2025]

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