http://www.mormondialogue.org/topic/58284-vogel-responds-to-starr/page__st__40
Here is the interesting part:
I disagree profoundly with your assessment of Bushman and particularly his magnum opus, Rough Stone Rolling. (I think his earlier work, Joseph Smith and the Beginnings of Mormonism is much better.)
Of course, I am not alone, as you probably know. Although I will not "name names," I could rattle off at least a half dozen very prominent LDS scholars/apologists who concur with my assessment of Bushman and his book. This is not meant as an appeal to authority (otherwise I would have named names), but rather merely to underscore the fact that there is a profound disagreement about these things among those whose knowledge of Mormon history is such that it renders them well-qualified to judge.
At any rate, there is a very good reason that Bushman is so popular among critics of Mormonism: he concurs more with them than he does with defenders of Mormonism. Does this necessarily imply that Bushman is wrong in his interpretations of the historical data? Well, yes, it does, as a matter of fact.
But seriously, there has been a pronounced reluctance among LDS apologists to strongly criticize Bushman and Rough Stone Rolling on account of a certain sense of "loyalty to the team." In my opinion, this has been very ill-advised and short-sighted. I hope that the recent shake-up at the NAMI will serve as a wake-up call to those who have been "biting their tongues" in the years since Rough Stone Rolling was published, and that it will finally receive the muscular critique it deserves
Wow, that would be interesting.