“An impressive and provocative study that makes several notable contributions to the historiography. . . . The Hunter Elite will be of interest to historians studying hunting, publishing, and conservation during the Progressive Era, as well as scholars of gender, leisure, media, and environmental politics.”—H-Net Reviews
"Anyone interested in this topic should read Kelly’s lively, well-researched, and thoughtful book."—American Historical Review
"Perhaps the greatest contribution of The Hunter Elite is Kelly’s focus on the employment of discourse through media publications such as Forest and Stream and authors such as Caspar Whitney. this book is highly recommended for both scholars of the West and environmental historians."—Western Historical Quarterly
"Kelly’s book is an important contribution to our understanding of hunting, conservation, and national identity at the turn of the century."—Environmental History
"A well-written, interesting, and valuable contribution to scholarship of the Progressive Era. Kelly engages with important questions of gender, race, class, and environment and at times offers brave interpretations, especially concerning questions of masculinity during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries."—Kansas History
"Kelly’s insightful analysis emphasizes the distance time and place that gave rise to the hunting narrative, the personalities who wrote those narratives, and the material manifestation of these publications."—Journal of Arizona History
"The book stands out for its contextualization of American big-game hunting, its discussion of the role that sportsmen and their hunting narratives played in the development of the nation's early environmental movement, its descriptions of the five most important elements of the sportsmen-hunter discourse, and its entertaining explanations of jack-lighting, snow-crusting, and stalking—-all old hunting techniques."—Montana The Magazine of Western History
"Kelly delves deeply into an impressive array of stories published by sportsmen-writers at the turn of the twentieth century. She offers an eye-opening explanation for sport hunters' influential positions at the forefront of the conservation movement."—Annals of Iowa
“Through a deep and engaging analysis, Tara Kathleen Kelly’s The Hunter Elite provides a refreshing perspective on the critical role that sportsmen and their hunting narratives played in the development of the early environmental movement. This is a valuable study of this important moment in American history.”—Greg Dehler, author of The Most Defiant Devil: William Temple Hornaday and His Controversial Crusade to Save American Wildlife
“Elegantly written, The Hunter Elite offers fresh insights on the rise of sport hunting and wilderness recreation. Kelly provocatively upends our usual assumptions about the rise of hunting during the turn of the twentieth century, eschewing the rote, rugged response to the ‘crisis of masculinity.’ Instead, her deep engagement with both the sportsmen themselves—as both hunters and writers—and with the expanding modern apparatus of travel, tourism, and publishing offers a compelling new framework to see the rise and decline of big-game hunting and the peculiar type of American conservation that emerged from this era.”—Phoebe S. K. Young, coeditor of Rendering Nature: Animals, Bodies, Places, Politics
“This lucid book uses intertextual analysis to expand our understanding of the culture and context of American big-game hunting. It takes up the interesting question of how a select group of East Coast hunters used their narratives to transform recreational hunting into the highest form of masculine labor and then examines how the emergence of other types of hunters, including women, made these narratives a potent site for debates about gender roles, power, and identity in early twentieth-century America.”—Angela Thompsell, author of Hunting Africa: British Sport, African Knowledge and the Nature of Empire