"Bottiger has produced a deeply researched and careful volume, one that represents the best job yet of examining the sources for Tippecanoe."-American Historical Review "This book is a welcome addition to the historiography and contributes a valuable analysis to what some might see as familiar territory."-John P. Bowes, Journal of American History "The Borderland of Fear offers a well-written, thought-provoking meditation on the complexity of Indian-White relations on the early frontier."-Robert M. Owens, Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education “Much of what we know about Prophetstown, Patrick Bottiger tells us in this provocative and fascinating new book, is a lie. But lies reveal as well as conceal, and in his hands the world of the Miami borderlands, which the lies both divulge and helped create, is far more compelling than the clashing Indian and American nationalisms that the older stories tell about Tippecanoe.”-Richard White, Margaret Byrne Professor of American History at Stanford University and past president of the Organization of American Historians