"In her remarkable new book, The Gunning of America, historian Pamela Haag undercuts much of the charged rhetoric about the importance of firearms in the nation's culture and history with a richly sourced, empirical look at the 19th century origins of the gun business and the men who made it."
--Boston Globe
"[An] inspired new book... Haag's book is strongest when it upends the belief that America has had an uninterrupted love affair with guns."--San Francisco Chronicle
"[A] fascinating exploration of the major businesses and families that have manufactured firearms--and manufactured the seductiveness of firearms--in this country over the past 150 years."--Carlos Lozada, Washington Post
"A revealing new account of the origins of America's gun industry."--New York Review of Books
"[A] fascinating account.... Both convincingly argued and eminently readable, Haag's book will intrigue readers on all sides of the gun control debate."--Publishers Weekly, "starred review"
"In her masterful The Gunning of America, Pamela Haag furnishes a salutary corrective to the perception of the gun's inevitability in American life by showing its history as a commodity invented and then deliberately marketed and distributed like any other widget or household appliance.... [A] beautifully composed and meticulously researched volume."--New Republic
"Pamela Haag has accomplished a rare feat. She combines wonderful storytelling with a serious analysis of the firearms business to reveal how the Winchester Repeating Arms Company taught Americans to love guns."--Richard White, Margaret Byrne Professor of American History, Stanford University
"Pamela Haag has written a very smart book, deeply researched, original, provocative. The compelling narrative makes a powerful argument about the origins of America's gun culture."--John Mack Faragher, Howard R. Lamar Professor of History, Yale University