"A Tale of Three Villages reflects an agile, resourceful approach to anthropological research. It draws on a variety of evidence, especially local knowledge in way that has come to define how good collaborative archaeology works today, and the result is a richly-informed diachronic account of Yup'ik place-making and identity." —Amy V. Margaris, Ethnoarchaeology
"Frink's work shows us that we have an opportunity to move our shared discipline in a new trajectory that values the knowledge produced by Indigenous scientists and establishes communities as equal partners in research that knows about, and cares about the past." —Canadian Journal of Archaeology
"Uses a novel approach to understanding the native (Alaskan) past and how the experiences that comprise that past were negotiated between indigenous and colonizing peoples." —James A. Delle, co-editor of Out of Many, One People: The Historical Archaeology of Colonial Jamaica
"A significant contribution to Yup'ik studies and the archaeology and ethnohistory of southwestern Alaska." —Christyann M. Darwent, University of California, Davis
"The work is one of the most significant in the literature of Arctic anthropology, archaeology, and ethnohistory." —Journal of Anthropological Research
"A contribution of theoretical, methodological, and regional significance." —UNLV News
"This text is remark able in its capacity for descriptive visualization of pre-industrial Yup'ik life ways." —Journal of Jesuit Studies