Lost Cities of El Norte: Coronado's Quest, the Unconquered West, and the Birth of American Indian Resistance

Peter Stark

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Book cover for Lost Cities of El Norte: Coronado's Quest, the Unconquered West, and the Birth of American Indian Resistance
Image for variant 9780063383883

Lost Cities of El Norte: Coronado's Quest, the Unconquered West, and the Birth of American Indian Resistance

Lost Cities of El Norte: Coronado's Quest, the Unconquered West, and the Birth of American Indian Resistance

Peter Stark

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Description

By the bestselling author of Astoria, a thrilling and masterfully crafted narrative of the Conquistador Francisco Coronado's expedition across 2,500 miles of the vast uncharted North American interior--"El Norte Misterioso" --where he was turned back by fierce indigenous resistance that would thwart white rule for the next three hundred years.

In 1540, the grandest exploring expedition ever assembled in the Americas paraded north from the ruins of the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan, a glittering column of 2,000 men heading into the unknown. Their destination was El Norte Misterioso--The Mysterious North, present-day United States--where fabulous cities of gold were rumored to shine beyond the horizon. Two years later, survivors began stumbling back, half dead. Lost to poisoned arrows, brutal deserts, starvation, cold, desertion, and countless other hardships, 90% of those who left would never return.

Led by Francisco Coronado and backed by the full weight of the Spanish empire, the superpower of its day, they had expected to seize the land, steal its riches, and subjugate its peoples, just as they had so recently done to the mighty Aztec and Inca empires. But instead they encountered the unconquered American West, populated by complex societies of indigenous nations, masters of a vast and unforgiving landscape who fiercely resisted this European "incursion" onto their lands.

Coronado and his people traversed 2,500 miles of unmapped terrain, ranging across the present-day U.S. states of California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, and finally Kansas. They were the first Europeans to gaze upon the Grand Canyon and the Rocky Mountains; made first contact with the Puebloan peoples; crossed the Sonoran Desert and the Great Plains, where they encountered endless herds of bison and the nomadic tribes who followed them. After leading the largest exploring cavalcade ever assembled in the New World, wearing his gilded armor and bobbing plume, Coronado retreated back to Mexico City two years later accompanied only by a hundred or so hangers-on and carried on a litter, a broken man. America's Southwest and Plains would remain unconquered for the next 300 years.

Critical Reviews

"[A] vivid history of the famed Spanish quest for fabled cities of gold. . . . . Native resistance, Stark notes, soon pushed the Spanish back into Mexico. If it had not, he adds provocatively, the Spanish Empire might well have extended all the way to the Mississippi, containing the United States on the opposite shore and creating a culture 'of Indigenous and European, something like today's Brazil.' It makes for a fine thought experiment to close a highly readable historical yarn. A welcome addition to the literature of Hispanic America and the American West." - Kirkus

"With vivid detail and infectious energy, Peter Stark is a uniquely gifted storyteller who makes history feel immediate and alive."

-DORIS KEARNS GOODWIN, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Leadership: In Turbulent Times

"More than two and a half centuries before Lewis and Clark embarked on their famous trek, another exploring party, less well-known today but in many ways more ambitious and consequential, headed into terra incognita to unlock the secrets of the American West. In Peter Stark's fresh and dramatic telling, Coronado's epic expedition comes alive in a narrative that deftly alternates between European and Indigenous perspectives, giving us a thoroughly modern take on one of history's classic sagas of adventure and first contact."

--HAMPTON SIDES, author of The Wide Wide Sea, In the Kingdom of Ice, and Blood and Thunder

"A gripping, engrossing story of the American Southwest in the 1540s, when the dreams of would-be conquistadors riding north from New Spain crashed into the spectacular landscape and a resourceful Native culture which, together, undid them. History's pivot balanced on Francisco de Coronado's strivings, cruelty, sufferings, and ultimate failure of vision. In Stark's place-sensitive prose you can smell the desert heat and the Great Plains dust."

-IAN FRAZIER, author of Great Plains

Publishing Information

Publisher: Mariner Books
Pub date: 2026-04-14
Length: 432 pages

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