"A compact yet well-researched history by noted UNLV history professor Rothman and Pomona College environmental professor Miller. . . . Death Valley needs all the friends it can get, and Rothman and Miller are good ones. It's enough to make me want to gas up the Subaru and make a trip to Panamint Springs. I'll add their book to my shovel and spare tire because it's also a useful tool. Death Valley National Park is destined to become dog-eared and re-read, the fine dust of the mystical desert place itself sprinkling its pages."--Mesquite Local News
"The authors have done an admirable and thorough job of relating the valley's history within the framework of Death Valley as a national park. The have made exhaustive use of primary and secondary resources, including records created by Death Valley National Monument/Park administrations. . . This is an important contribution to the larger body of environmental history of the American West." --Nevada in the West-- "Nevada in the West"
"With this book, Rothman and Miller provide a most welcome addition to the literature of Death Valley." --Western Historical Quarterly-- "Western Historical Quarterly"
"At 185 pages, it's a compact but well-research story first written by noted UNLV history professor Rothman an recently updated by Pomona College environmental professor Miller. . . Death Valley National Park is destined to become dog-eared and reread, the fine dust of the mystical desert place itself sprinkling its pages." --The Las Vegas Review Journal-- "Las Vegas Review Journal"
"All readers of this useful book . . . will have a clear sense of the park's contentious past, and likely agree with the authors' conclusion that 'managing Death Valley National Park never has been nor ever will be simple.'" --Environmental History--Kevin C. Brown "Environmental History" (4/1/2015 12:00:00 AM)
"Death Valley National Park is destined to become dog-eared and reread, the fine dust of the mystical desert place itself sprinkling its pages." --John L. Smith, Las Vegas Review-Journal
"Death Valley is truly one of our great national treasures. Rothman and Miller offer a compelling account of the people who inhabited and shaped the history of this remarkable landscape." --Dianne Feinstein, Senator
"Hal K. Rothman and Char Miller are long-established heroes of U.S. environmental history. Therefore, their co-authoring Death Valley National Park is cause for celebration. Never before has this iconic landscape been examined with such judicious love and respect. Their prose sparkles and their research is impeccable. Highly recommended!" --Douglas Brinkley, professor of history at Rice University, history commentator for CBS News, and author of The Wilderness Warrior: Theodore Roosevelt and the Crusade for America