Sick Book Series

About the Sick Book Series

The Emil and Kathleen Sick Lecture-Book Series in Western History and Biography

The Sick Series in Western History features scholarly books on the peoples and issues that have defined and shaped the North American West. Published by the University of Washington Press, the series seeks to deepen and expand our understanding of the West as a region and its role in the making of the United States and the modern world. We have a particular interest in publishing work that addresses the themes of race, gender, environment, and colonialism, as well as books that place the region in transnational and comparative contexts.

For a complete list of Sick Book titles see here.


Seattle From the Margins

From the origins of the city in the mid-nineteenth century to the beginning of World War II, Seattle’s urban workforce consisted overwhelmingly of migrant laborers who powered the seasonal, extractive economy of the Pacific Northwest. Though the city benefitted from this mobile labor force—consisting largely of Indigenous peoples and Asian migrants—municipal authorities, elites, and reformers continually depicted these workers and the spaces they inhabited as troublesome and as impediments to urban progress. Today the physical landscape bears little evidence of their historical presence in the city.

Tracing histories from unheralded sites such as labor camps, lumber towns, lodging houses, and so-called slums, Seattle from the Margins shows how migrant laborers worked alongside each other, competed over jobs, and forged unexpected alliances within the marine and coastal spaces of the Puget Sound. By uncovering the historical presence of marginalized groups and asserting their significance in the development of the city, Megan Asaka offers a deeper understanding of Seattle’s complex past.

 

 


Pioneering Death

On an Autumn day in 1895, eighteen-year-old Loyd Montgomery shot his parents and a neighbor in a gruesome act that reverberated beyond the small confines of Montgomery’s Oregon farming community. The dispassionate slaying and Montgomery’s consequent hanging exposed the fault lines of a rapidly industrializing and urbanizing society and revealed the burdens of pioneer narratives boys of the time inherited.

In Pioneering Death, Peter Boag examines the Brownsville parricide as an allegory for the destabilizing transitions within the rural United States at the end of the nineteenth century. While pioneer families celebrated and memorialized founders of western white settler society, their children faced a present and future in frightening decline. Connecting a fascinating true-crime story with the broader forces that produced the murders, Boag uncovers how Loyd’s violent acts reflected the brutality of American colonizing efforts, the anxieties of global capitalism, and the buried traumas of childhood in the American West.

 


For publishing inquiries, contact:

Larin McLaughlin
Editor in Chief & Series Acquisitions Editor
University of Washington Press

Josh Reid
Series Editor
Director, Center for the Study of the Pacific Northwest
Department of History
University of Washington