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Winner of
the William P. Clements Prize for the Best Non-Fiction
Book on Southwestern America Published in 2008
The Comanche Empire
Yale University Press:
2008
Honoring
Pekka Hämäläinen
In the
eighteenth and
early nineteenth
centuries, at
the high tide of
imperial
struggles in
North America,
an indigenous
empire rose to
dominate the
fiercely
contested lands
of the American
Southwest, the
southern Great
Plains, and
northern Mexico.
This powerful
empire, built by
the Comanche
Indians,
eclipsed its
various European
rivals in
military
prowess,
political
prestige,
economic power,
commercial
reach, and
cultural
influence. Yet,
until now, the
Comanche empire
has gone
unrecognized in
historical
accounts.
This compelling
and original
book uncovers
the lost story
of the Comanches.
It is a story
that challenges
the idea of
indigenous
peoples as
victims of
European
expansion and
offers a new
model for the
history of
colonial
expansion,
colonial
frontiers, and
Native-European
relations in
North America
and elsewhere.
Pekka Hämäläinen
shows in vivid
detail how the
Comanches built
their unique
empire and
resisted
European
colonization,
and why they
fell to defeat
in 1875. With
extensive
knowledge and
deep insight,
the author
brings into
clear relief the
Comanches’
remarkable
impact on the
trajectory of
history.
Awards & Distinctions
Winner
of the
2009
Bancroft
Prize,
given by
Columbia
University;
Winner
of the
2008
Kate
Broocks
Bates
Award,
presented
by the
Texas
State
Historical
Association;
Co-winner
of the
2009
Merle
Curti
Award, presented by the
Organization of American
Historians;
Received
Honorable
Mention
for the
2008
PROSE
Award in
the U.S.
History
and
Biography/Autobiography
category,
sponsored
by the
Association
of
American
Publishers;
Gold
medal
winner of
the 2008
Book of
the Year
Award in
the
category
of
History,
presented
by
ForeWord
magazine;
Winner
of the
Great
Plains
Distinguished
Book
Prize
presented
by the
University
of
Nebraska-Lincoln's
Center
for
Great
Plains
Studies;
Co-Silver
medal
winner
of the
2009
Independent
Publisher
Book
Award in
the
category
of
History;
and an alternate
selection
of History
Book
Club,
Military
Book
Club,
and
Book-of-the-Month
Club
The $2,500
Clements Book Prize honors fine writing and original
research on the American Southwest. The competition is
open to any nonfiction book, including biography, on any
aspect of Southwestern life, past or present. The
William P. Clements Center for Southwest Studies is part
of SMU's Dedman College and affiliated with the
Department of History. It was created to promote
research, publishing, teaching and public programming in
a variety of fields related to the American Southwest.

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