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Ghosts of Crook County by Russell Cobb
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Ghosts of Crook County

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Ghosts of Crook County by Russell Cobb
Hardcover $32.95
Oct 08, 2024 | ISBN 9780807007372

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    Oct 08, 2024 | ISBN 9780807007372

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Product Details

Praise

“[A] riveting legal thriller . . . superb historical sleuthing . . . It’s an astonishing exposé.”
Publishers Weekly, Starred Review

“True-crime and social science readers will find this tangled tale fascinating . . . This well-researched and vividly told account of Oklahoma’s oil boom highlights the corruption, opportunism, and racism that birthed the modern oil and gas industry.”
Shelf Awarness, Starred Review

“The great-grandson of an Oklahoma oilman interrogates a legal conundrum that lays bare the corruption beneath the creation of his home state.”
Kirkus Reviews

“This powerful work is equal parts history and true crime. The result is a historical record illuminating a failure of law and policy.”
Booklist

“Russell Cobb is a master storyteller. . . . Ghosts of Crook County is his best yet.”
—Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, American Book Award–winning author of An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States

“Russell Cobb has delivered a bombshell of a book. Ghosts of Crook County isn’t just a deeply researched, gripping historical detective story. It is also a compelling meditation on wealth and power.”
—Scott Ellsworth, author of The Ground Breaking: The Tulsa Race Massacre and an American City’s Search for Justice

“If you’ve read Killers of the Flower Moon and were enraged but engrossed in the story, Ghosts of Crook County is also the book for you—and you’ll likely enjoy it more!”
—Kyle T. Mays (Saginaw Chippewa), author of An Afro-Indigenous History of the United States

“An enthralling must-read story of Oklahoma oil . . . This is a masterful book that reveals Oklahoma’s past (hidden) encounters with crude with an eye to its enduring potential for violence and injustice today.”
—Darren Dochuk, author of Anointed with Oil: How Christianity and Crude Made Modern America

“Like some bastard son of Angie Debo and David Grann, in Ghosts of Crook County Russell Cobb blends the archival acuity of the former with the reliable readability of the latter.”
—Jeff Martin, owner, Magic City Books

“A suspenseful story of corruption, power, and malice that you will never forget!”
—Donald L. Fixico (Muscogee, Seminole, Shawnee, and Sac and Fox), author of The State of Sequoyah: Indigenous Sovereignty and the Quest for an Indian State

Table Of Contents

PROLOGUE
“It Was Doubtful If Such a Person Had Ever Existed”

CHAPTER 1
Growing Up in the Territory with Minnie Atkins

CHAPTER 2
“Into the Light Before”: Minnie Atkins at Tullahassee and Carlisle

CHAPTER 3
Becoming a Lady: Minnie Lights Out for the West

CHAPTER 4
“My Nation Is About to Disappear”: Enrollment Begins

CHAPTER 5
Charles Page, the “Secular Saint” of Modern-Day Tulsa

CHAPTER 6
The Making of “Daddy” Page

CHAPTER 7
Oklahoma Joins the Dance: The First Oil Boom in Indian Territory

CHAPTER 8
Emarthla of the Snake Faction

CHAPTER 9
Bartlett’s Quitclaim: The Run on Tommy’s Land Begins

CHAPTER 10
“All Crooks at Tulsa”: Minnie Atkins and the Receivership Hearing

CHAPTER 11
Minnie Atkins in Seattle

CHAPTER 12
“Utterly Unworthy of Your Confidence”: The Campaign Against R. C. Allen

CHAPTER 13
“There Is No Justice for the Weak?”: Resistance Against Allotment

CHAPTER 14
“What a Fool We Have Been”: The Atkins Sisters Face Off in Federal Court

CHAPTER 15
“Nancy Shatters Own Chance”

“I AM A KING!”
The Sam Brown Interlude

CHAPTER 16
“You Know How a White Man Is About Money”: Sadie James Reveals All

CHAPTER 17
“Anything to Get the Coin”: The Aftermath of the Trials, and the Death of Minnie Atkins

CHAPTER 18
From Blood Quantum to Liquid Gold: Sally Atkins and the Erosion of Black Freedom During Oklahoma’s First Oil Boom

CHAPTER 19
“But Insists He Has Never Died”

EPILOGUE
Take Me Back to Tulsa

Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
Photo Insert Credits

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