"Unrepentant Dakota Woman represents an important methodological study that conveys how ignored histories can add depth to our study of the past. Indigenous women, Clemmons posits, should be central to studying and understanding this period; her book succeeds in supporting such an argument. Readers will find stories of power and resistance that offer fresh perspectives on Indigenous women during the nineteenth century." — John R. Legg, George Mason University (review from The Western Historical Quarterly, Winter 2024 issue)"Linda Clemmons has written on a topic little explored in Indian-white relations in the mid-19th Century. . . . In a fascinating and troubling narrative, Clemmons succeeds in exposing how missionaries pressured Native people to accept the white man's Christian values." — Abraham Hoffman, Western Writers of America, Roundup Magazine, April 2024 Issue