Hell With the Fire Out: A History of the Modoc War

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(Run Time: 7:22)

Written by Arthur Quinn
Read by Ed Quinn (with an introduction written and read by Julia Whelan)

The final book from esteemed Berkeley historian Arthur Quinn, Hell With the Fire Out is both a complex chronicle of a forgotten chapter in American Indian history and a vivid detailing of human foible, folly, and failure. With a novelistic flair, Quinn outlines the sad inevitability of America's westward expansion in its post-Civil War era. Wrangling all the inherent contradictions — Quaker Peace Policy vs Grant and Sherman's War Department; inter- and inner-tribal conflicts; the opposing attitudes of the region's White settlers — Quinn gives us a battle story not merely between nations and governments, but within the hearts of the very individuals at its center.

This is the first time an audio version of this book has been available and it is read by none other than the author's son, actor Ed Quinn (Two Broke Girls, One Day at a Time, Tyler Perry's The Oval). Included in your purchase: an exclusive behind-the-scenes interview with Ed Quinn and Julia Whelan at the end of the audiobook. (Run Time: 0:33)

Art Quinn

Arthur Quinn (1942-1997) was a third-generation Californian, star baseball player, Princeton Ph.D., esteemed professor of Rhetoric at the University of California, Berkeley, fellow of Clare Hall, Cambridge, husband, and father of four. A trusted source for students and scholars alike, Quinn published books on myriad topics, including the Old Testament, British philosophy, rhetoric, and writing. His greatest love, however, was the history of the United States, especially that of his native California. Dubbed "the Ecclesiastes of the West Coast" by Czeslaw Milosz, Quinn wrote three books on this subject, the last of which was Hell With the Fire Out: A History of the Modoc War. It was published posthumously to much acclaim, as with everything he did in life.

Ed Quinn

Ed Quinn is an actor and musician. After graduating from the University of California, Berkeley with a degree in History, he embarked on a modeling career in Europe. Upon his return to the US, he began his 20+ year acting career, appearing most notably in True Blood, Eureka, Two Broke Girls, and One Day at a Time. He is currently the lead on Tyler Perry's The Oval, playing the President of the United States, and, in late 2024, can be seen in the feature films Shadow Force and Man In the Long Black Coat. He also releases music and music videos with his band Ed Quinn and The Swamp Metal Allstars. This is his first audiobook narration.

The Modoc War, pivotal in American history, pitted the peace policies of President Ulysses S. Grant and Quaker activist Lucretia Mott against William Tecumseh Sherman - the destroyer of Georgia - and his outspoken desire for the Modocs' "utter extermination." When it ended in 1873, with the execution of the tribal leaders and the relocation of the Modoc tribe to Oklahoma, the federal government's Peace Commission was in tatters. The way was paved toward the more famous, but no bloodier, battle at Little Bighorn and the battle at Wounded Knee, the last battle of the western Indian wars and the final closing of the frontier.

"A vivid re-creation of an often overlooked episode in the Indian Wars. The Modoc War, fought in 1869-72, has largely been regarded as a sideshow in light of other, more famous campaigns, such as those against Crazy Horse and Cochise. Berkeley scholar Quinn, the author of several volumes of history (A New World, 1994, etc.), makes a solid case for why the war — really a series of skirmishes, some of them terribly bloody, on the Oregon-California border — should have a more central place in our historical canon." — Kirkus

"Quinn (The Rivals) presents a balanced treatment of this unhappy episode, but not one without dramatic flair. His writing is compelling and vivid... Broad in scope, the book covers the earlier history of the Modocs, the war, the execution of tribal leaders and the tribe's ultimate fate. It is sure to place readers — avid for a rare look at a forgotten war — on the edge of their seats." — Publishers Weekly

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