Who gets to write history?<br />And what happens when we've been reading only one side of the story?<br />What have we missed by listening only to the conquerors?<br /><br />For centuries California's origin story has been built largely from Spanish journals missionary records ship's Logs and colonial reports. But long before Europeans began writing about this land Indigenous artists were painting their own record across the canyon walls of Baja California - vast murals of hunters the animals they hunted spiritual ceremonies enemies and survival.<br /><br />Those murals were not decoration. They were events memories. They were history.<br /><br />The Elusive Conquest of Queen Califa reimagines California's past by placing that Indigenous record at the center. At its heart is Califa a sharp determined Cochimi healer whose people resist Spanish incursions for generations. Unlike the rapid fall of the Aztec Empire California proved stubborn difficult and unyielding. Conquest here unfolded slowly - through environmental hardship disease shifting alliances and the relentless pressure of the Spanish and Jesuit empires.<br /><br />Nearly three centuries later three young Americans set out to backpack the entire length of Baja California tracing the Camino Real and the ruins of the Jesuit missions. As they walk the same desert corridors once traveled by shamans soldiers and priests they confront the same forces that shaped the region: survival belief ambition faith and the struggle over whose story endures.<br /><br />Blending historical fiction memoir and five decades of research Alan Ehrgott challenges readers to reconsider not only California's past but the nature of historical evidence itself. What if murals landscapes and oral memory deserve to stand beside written archives? What if conquest narratives look different when viewed from the ground rather than behind a canon on the ship's deck?<br /><br />This is more than a regional history.<br /><br />It's an invitation to rethink how civilizations record themselves - and how entire cultures can be misunderstood when their forms of memory don't fit Western expectations.<br /><br />California is only the beginning.
Piracy-free
Assured Quality
Secure Transactions
Delivery Options
Please enter pincode to check delivery time.
*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.