“Readers interested in Lincoln, the United States West, and the intersection of the man and the region from which he hailed will hope, I am sure, for just such a book—and who better than Richard Etulain to write it?”—David A. Johnson, Oregon Historical Quarterly
“Lincoln Looks West [fills] a huge void in the neglected topic of Lincoln and the West. Anyone wanting to know more about Lincoln and the trans-Mississippi region will certainly want this book.”—Jerry Thompson, New Mexico Historical Review
“This compilation of essays provides a wide range of topics, brings together a plethora of research, and demonstrates that the West was never far from Lincoln’s mind.”—Patricia Ann Owens, The Annals of Iowa
“[T]he contributions in Lincoln Looks West provide the reader with insightful perspectives of the rich and varied terrain of the West as it relates to Lincoln and the dominant issues of the mid-nineteenth-century United States, terrain that merits further attention.”—Bartholomew H. Sparrow, H-CivWar
“This sweeping collection of more than a full generation’s worth of scholarship on the neglected topic of Lincoln and the West fills a huge void in the historical literature. Richard Etulain deserves much credit for assembling in one valuable book the best and the brightest essays on this intriguing subject, adding an important introduction that reflects on—and adds to—the record. Why it took so long to give readers a chance to see the West as this western president saw it is hard to fathom; the good news is that this volume ends a long drought with a flourish.”—Harold Holzer, cochairman, U.S. Lincoln Bicentennial Commission
“These nine essays help illuminate an aspect of Lincoln’s career, both presidential and prepresidential, that deserves to be better understood. Students of the sixteenth president’s life and times will welcome this collection as a valuable addition to the literature.”—Michael Burlingame, author of Abraham Lincoln: A Life
“The comprehensive introduction and nine balanced essays mark a pioneer assessment of Lincoln’s relationship to the vast terrain that stretches west from the Mississippi River. Lincoln Looks West belongs in the library of every Lincoln admirer.”—Ferenc Morton Szasz, author of Abraham Lincoln and Robert Burns: Connected Lives and Legends