01643cam a2200433u 4500001001100000003000700011005001700018007000300035008004100038020001800079020001500097035002100112040004700133043001200180050002500192082001600217100002600233245007000259246002200329250004100351260004500392264001200437300002800449336002100477337002500498338002300523500006500546504005600611520029200667600003200959650003500991650002901026650003101055655001901086655002401105655002101129655003101150655002801181757358653 OCoLC 20190501234042.0ta150714t20111998nyu b 000 1 eng  a9780312199432 a0312199430 a(OCoLC)757358653 aVHBbengerdacVHBdVHBdLF3dOCLCQdOCLCA an-usp--14aPS3556.E66bO54 199804a813/.542221 aFergus, Jim,eauthor.10aOne thousand white women :bthe journals of May DoddcJim Fergus.3 a1000 white women. aSecond St. Martin's Griffin edition. 1aNew York :bSt. Martin's Griffin,c2011. 4c♭1998 axiv, 436 pages ;c21 cm atext2rdacontent aunmediated2rdamedia avolume2rdacarrier aIncludes Reading Group Gold selection (reading group guide). aIncludes bibliographical references (p. [435]-436). aAn Indian request in 1854 for 1,000 white brides to ensure peace is secretly approved by the U.S. government in this alternate-history novel. Their journey west is described by May Dodd, a high-society woman released from an asylum where she was incarcerated by her family for an affair.00aLittle Wolf,-1904vFiction. 0aInterracial marriagevFiction. 0aWomen pioneersvFiction. 0aCheyenne IndiansvFiction. 0aDiary fiction. 0aHistorical fiction. 0aWestern stories. 7aHistorical fiction.2gsafd 7aWestern stories.2gsafd