Bison


The Eyes & the Impossible
Bear Bottom (FunJungle, #7)
The Bison and the Butterfly: An ecosystem story
Last Stand: George Bird Grinnell, the Battle to Save the Buffalo, and the Birth of the New West
Buffalo for the Broken Heart: Restoring Life to a Black Hills Ranch
Portraits Of The Bison: An Illustrated Guide To Bison Society
American Buffalo: In Search of a Lost Icon
To Save the Wild Bison: Life on the Edge in Yellowstone
Rathuun: King of the Prairie: A Western Frontier Adventure
Poo Pile on the Prairie (Tiny Habitats)
A Grandmother Begins the Story
Prairie Edge
The Gift of the Great Buffalo
Bison (Seedlings)
The Hunting of the Buffalo
Charlotte’s Web by E.B. WhiteThe Black Stallion by Walter FarleyBambi by Felix SaltenMy Friend Flicka by Mary O'HaraBlack Beauty by Anna Sewell
Books about Hoofed Animals
338 books — 29 voters
The Buffalo Hunter Hunter by Stephen Graham JonesPrairie Edge by Conor KerrJonny Appleseed by Joshua WhiteheadAmerican Buffalo by Steven RinellaTenacious Beasts by Christopher J. Preston
Bison / Buffalo Covers
6 books — 1 voter

Buffalo for the Broken Heart by Dan        O'BrienGrassland by Richard ManningGreat Plains by Michael ForsbergWhere the Buffalo Roam by Anne MatthewsWhere The Sky Began by John Madson
Sea of Grass
49 books — 13 voters
American Wolf by Nate BlakesleeEmpire of Shadows by George BlackDecade of the Wolf by Gary FergusonSquatters in Paradise by James  PerryYellowstone Has Teeth by Marjane Ambler
Yellowstone National Park
50 books — 17 voters


Stephen Graham Jones
... anyway, the traders didn't want them as much. Just winter-coat buffalo robes, as many as we could bring in, so that we had to imagine all the napikwans in their big camps huddled in the buffalo robes, making it look like the buffalo never went away, they just stayed in place, let the buildings and roads come up around them until they forgot they were grass eaters, started standing in line at banks and mailing letters. ...more
Stephen Graham Jones, The Buffalo Hunter Hunter

Christopher  Ketcham
The fate of our national mammal is decided by ranchers who act as self-appointed representatives of the American people.
Christopher Ketcham, This Land: How Cowboys, Capitalism, and Corruption are Ruining the American West

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