Get our latest staff recommendations, award news and digital catalog links right to your inbox.
Table of Contents
About The Book
“A richly layered portrait of the nineteenth-century frontier” (Publishers Weekly, starred review), The Westerners is an epic counter-history of the American West told in two interwoven stories. The first reveals the captivating lives of women and men moving through the American West—Indigenous peoples, Black Americans, Mexican Americans, and Canadian and Asian immigrants—in the 19th century. The second tracks the attempts of many Americans to erase these westerners from history, through the formation of a national mythology that lionized individualism and conquest and celebrated white settlers traveling west in search of prosperity.
This vivid, eye-opening account is a new history of the frontier, told through the lives of seven extraordinary individuals: Sacajawea, not just Lewis and Clark’s guide but an explorer who forged her own path; Jim Beckwourth, a biracial fur trader whose sharp cultural insight made him an important player in western geopolitics; María Gertrudis Barceló, a Hispana gambling saloon owner who broke every stereotype to become the wealthiest woman in Santa Fe; Ovando Hollister, a gold miner, soldier, and newspaperman who championed western expansion; Little Wolf, a Northern Cheyenne chief whose courageous leadership secured his people’s future; Canadian immigrant Ella Watson, who strove to become a rancher in a male-dominated world; and the defiant Polly Bemis, a Chinese immigrant who carved out a life in Idaho despite federal expulsion efforts.
Highlighting the perseverance and ingenuity of communities that have otherwise been forgotten or erased, this important book challenges us to reimagine who we are and where we came from. “Nelson’s deft hand at writing draws the reader in with heartfelt and engaging storytelling.” (Colorado Sun)
Appearances
In Person
Old Firehouse Books
In Person
Composition Shop
In Person
Tattered Cover Aspen Grove
In Person
Pioneers Museum
In Person
Concord Museum
In Person
The Filson Historical Society
Product Details
- Publisher: Scribner (March 31, 2026)
- Length: 464 pages
- ISBN13: 9781668004364
Browse Related Books
Raves and Reviews
"A richly layered portrait of the 19th-century frontier….Nelson weaves her subjects' lives together—they often quite literally cross paths—while simultaneously showing how their stories were changed or erased in favor of a more clear-cut frontier myth of white male dominance. Along the way, she highlights moments where Americans could have achieved a more just future….This complicated, sprawling epic is untamed in a good way." —Publishers Weekly, STARRED review
"Nelson’s narrative…makes a valuable corrective. A useful survey of the ‘messy, complicated lives of the real people who built the West." —Kirkus Reviews
"A uniquely compelling look at the dynamism and conflict that defined the West." —Booklist
One of LitHub's Most Anticipated Books of 2026
"American identity was born of myth, forged in fireside tales of frontier heroism and endless abundance. But insofar as that identity was largely and intentionally anchored in whiteness, many of the real stories—just as mythic, just as legendary—went untold or ignored, simply because the heroes didn’t have the right skin color...Megan Kate Nelson seeks to redress those elisions, uncovering a diverse and magnificent cast of characters whose lives are just as important to the story of the west as any blue-eyed cowboy: from Cheyenne chiefs to biracial fur traders to women ranchers, The Westerners makes room for everyone." —Jonny Diamond, LitHub
"Once again Megan Kate Nelson has offered up a new understanding of western history that is both fresh and persuasive. Here she gives us interlocking stories and vivid characters vital to the West’s story that were then obscured or wholly refurbished to fit the mythic needs of a much narrower view of our past. Her telling feels far truer than that. It captures the glorious messiness of western, and of American, history. The Westerners is a wonderful book." —Elliott West, Pulitzer Prize finalist, winner of the Bancroft Prize, and author of Continental Reckoning: The American West in the Age of Expansion
"The Westerners is a compulsively readable, deeply informed, and interpretively bold set of stories about people who lived in and transformed what became the American West. Megan Kate Nelson gives us a West that belongs to all of us.” —Virginia Scharff, Chair of Western Women’s History, the Autry Museum of the American West, Los Angeles
Resources and Downloads
High Resolution Images
-
Book Cover Image (jpg): The Westerners
eBook 9781668004364
-
Author Photo (jpg): Megan Kate Nelson Photograph by Sharona Jacobs(0.1 MB)
Any use of an author photo must include its respective photo credit


