Lawyer Matteoni presents the parallel lives of Dakota chief Sitting Bull and Indian agent James McLaughlin, two men who would ultimately clash in the Dakota prairie country. The volume begins with the Minnesota River Valley uprisings of the 1860s, documenting the ensuing conflict between the U.S. government and the residents of the Northern Plains. Sitting Bull’s life is revealed beyond the context of Gen. Custer’s defeat at the Battle of Little Bighorn as the author documents Sitting Bull’s exodus to Canada, continued resistance to reservation life, metropolitan tours with Buffalo Bill and Annie Oakley, and controversial death after McLaughlin ordered his arrest. Matteoni mines McLaughlin’s writings, government treaties, and later biographies of Sitting Bull. . . .The author also utilizes his legal knowledge to provide background to the various treaties broken by the U.S. government, occasionally sprinkling 'interpretive quotations' into the text to give voice to the account. . . .[T]he book achieves an information-rich narrative of latter 19th-century Dakota history. An informative debut for those seeking a focused, detailed portrait of Sitting Bull’s life and the struggle for dominance of the American Plains.