An Apache Iliad

An Apache Iliad is a gripping, deeply researched account of Geronimo’s final decade of war—told through the lens of one of history’s greatest epics. Award-winning historian W. Michael Farmer reveals the striking parallels between the Apache’s desperate fight for survival and Homer’s Iliad, crafting a narrative as timeless as it is tragic.
For nearly ten years, Geronimo and his warriors defied two nations, believing their mountain strongholds were as impregnable as Troy’s great walls. Like Achilles and Hector, legendary figures emerged—Geronimo, the fierce and cunning warrior; Captain Emmett Crawford, the relentless American officer; and Colonel Joaquin Terrazas, Mexico’s ruthless Apache hunter. Yet in the end, the war was not lost on the battlefield, but through deception. Just as the Trojans fell to a wooden horse filled with hidden enemies, the Apache surrendered to promises never kept, becoming prisoners of war for decades.
Across deserts, mountains, and borderlands, the true scale of the conflict becomes staggering. Five thousand American troops, three thousand Mexican soldiers, and armed civilian posses scoured two nations in pursuit of a band so small it could vanish between canyon walls—yet they never broke them. What finally ended the last Apache war wasn’t force but fraud: promises of protection, reunion, and a peaceful homeland that dissolved the moment Geronimo laid down his weapons. The result was decades of imprisonment, families scattered, and a people fighting to preserve their identity within the very system that claimed to save them.
Told through vivid, true stories supported by historic photographs and rare accounts, An Apache Iliad sheds new light on Geronimo’s fight for freedom. This is not just the story of a war—it is the story of betrayal, endurance, and the resilience of a people whose legacy still echoes through history.











