This has to be one of my favorite mystery thrillers because it was set in one of my favorite places. This is a well paced thriller with interesting characters and a nice sense of wilderness. I could debate things like porcupine grass on the trail and a few details, but that is not what this is about. Just as the Indian reservation is fictitious so is the BWCA that is in the book and yet the book captures the spirit of both.
He does a good job bringing in the Ojibwe culture as well as the terror of having murders and violence in a place of solitude and renewal.
This is about a young native woman who is a successful singer and star and the people who were associated with her mother during her mother's rise to prominence. There is a nice mix of country western singer, gangster and public defender - all the father of the missing woman and some of the most cold blooded killers you will find in literature.
The campfires and Ojibwe tales blend with the desperation to save or to kill the young woman and the book holds together for all 400 pages.
It is hard to tell about a book like this without giving too much away - so here is the summary - if you like mysteries, American Indians, and wilderness - you will like this.
The Minnesota reader is Mike Link. In 2010 he and his wife, Kate Crowley, took a 145 day 1550 mile walk along the shoreline of the world's largest lake - Superior and have just published GOING FULL CIRCLE - published by Lake Superior Magazine. Mike's career as a naturalist, retired director of the Audubon Center, College Professor in environmental education, and writer influences his reading.
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Monday, September 24, 2012
In Patagonia
Published in 1977,
this is now considered classic in travel literature. It is a tail that fallows the authors
wandering and curiosity.
It is a look at
the communities and locations through the people he meets, the legends he hears
and the literature he has read. As an art and architecture writer - Chatwin set out because of a map he had seen in the house of one of his interviewees. He looked at it and said I always wanted to go there. The very senior persons said - so have I; go there for me - and he did.
This land has Scotch, English, Boers, Chileans, and other
outsiders who are supposed to represent the civilized world and live on the
land that adsorbed the blood of the indigenous people who take pride in
replacing the “backward” inhabitants. This
is the perversity of human history and the writing and publishing history by
the winners.
Yet in this rugged and remote land victors continue to
change. There is the time of Butch
Cassidy and the Sun Dance Kid – which really did happen and the author enjoys
visiting the sites and collecting the local versions of the stories and
history. He uncovers uprising of the
anarchists, Simon Radowitzky – a Russian
Jew who led the peons and entered prisons that are horror stories by
themselves.
Darwin’s visit is given a short comment, while Jemmy Button
the Patagonia who is brought to Europe to be civilized and returns to lead a
small revolt gets a fascinating reflection.
And so does the obscure individual who wrote the indigenous dictionary –
the only thing left from the original population. We meet a woman who sold all she had and
wanders the world to see flowering shrubs and works as a gardener to support
her travels.
We find out that there are aspects of Patagonia in Donnes
poetry, Dante’s infernal and even Poe’s short stories. We find the land and the people rugged, we
discover the background, but in the end we are not presented with a place or a
people that calls out to be visited. It
is Chatwin’s perspective and it is fun and informative reading. How accurate it may be today is something we
cannot know, it need another wanderer with keen observation, and ear for
details and the ability to adapt.
It is said that he redefined what it means to be a travel writer.
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
The Devil's Backbone - Jonathan Daniels
The Devil’s
Backbone - Jonathan Daniels
When we were researching
our Mississippi River bike trip one of our locations was Natchez Trace National
Park. This historic trail is now an
excellent drive and bike and one of the true swaths of beauty in the south. It is also very significant to the
Mississippi River. In Abraham Lincoln’s
youth, his father had to walk back up the Trace after taking a boat down to New
Orleans. Before steam and other
inventions allowed upstream travel boats were loaded and the sold – first the
goods and then the boat itself which was dismantled for lumber and
construction.
Over the years
the characters of the American West – the notorious General Wilkinson and the
strong minded Andrew Jackson were regulars on the Trace. It was where Lewis met his demise after his
success on the trail and then his appointment by Jefferson to a position at St
Louis. There were outright criminals that worked the trail and terrorized the
travelers and there were shady characters like Aaron Burr. The stories are about slaves and ex-slaves,
Indians, pioneers, road agents, and road houses. It is an intriguing combination that ties in
with the river itself and the business at Natchez which was the real crossroads
of the region.
I wanted to learn
the story of the Natchez Trace and this book which was first published in 1962
was recommended. It was a good choice,
but you do have to realize when it was written and then you can understand some
of the less than PC descriptions that occasionally appear in the text.
The author
wanders from the path to the river and even across the river with episodes of
Spanish, French, English, American intrigues and he covers a broad swath of the
history when this was the America West and across the river was another
country.
It was a good
choice and the quotes below will share some of the tales:
“this trail which
DeSoto crossed ran northward 600 miles from the loess bluffs above the
Mississippi where the Natchez tribe of Indians performed bloody rites at White
Apple Village. This was to be the site
of the town of Natchez. Through the
wilderness the path twisted across the lands of the Choctaws and the
Chickasaws. Its northern terminus was in
the game-rich hunting grounds of many tribes in Tennessee. There settlements on the Cumberland River were
to grow into the city of Nashville.”
"with the
French and Indian War in America, rule of the Mississippi River Valley passed,
in 1763 from Louis XV to George III"
"They came in a variety of boats. There were canoes after the Hiawatha
northern, birchbark fashion. There were
others, called pirogues, hollowed fromt he trunks of big trees and fastented
together with heavy planks. There were
bateaux, light, flat bottomed boats tapering towards the ends, and skiffs,
light enough to be rowed. More important
were the faltboats. They were called
arks, Kentucky boats, New Orleans boats, and most often, broadhorms. Their only means of porpulsion was human
muscle and the current of the river.
They varied greatly in size, from 20 - 60 feet in width. They cost about three or four dollars for
each foot in length and were generally sold for lumber at their downstream
destinations. Some of them had pens for
cattle, horses, and swine."
“Already there were some who, according to an early
Mississippi saying considered ‘a barrel of whiskey a week but a small allowance
for a large family without any cow.”
"Natchez-under-the-Hill, a mile-long flat below the
bluffs, was sternly described as 'a stale sordid sodden place.' Still, with a vividness which sometimes
reflected fascination through indignation, travelers reported its congregation
of 'whores, boatmen, gamblers, bruisers' frequenting 'barrooms and gambling
hells' and brothels reeking with the smell of dirty men and women, of garbage,
and river muck."
"Operating a
floating house of prostitution, [Annie Christmas] was reported to be 6 feet 8 inches
tall and able to handle in a fight or a bawdy frolic the toughest flatboatmen
on the river."
"In October,
1801, only a few American Soldiers at Chickasaw Bluff guarded the strategic
heights from the Spaniards across the wide river. It was still Chickasaw
country, though [Andrew] Jackson's partner, John Overton, had a trading post
there. Twenty years later Jackson and Overton, as real estate promoters, called
the site 'Memphis' 'on the American Nile.'"
"On October 12, 1802, 'the right of deposit of American
produce' was suspended by the Spanish government at New Orleans. That closed the port to American Mississippi
trade. Once more General Wilkinson was
at the center of explosion. That
suspension, supposedly at the inspiration of Napoleon, who had secured a treaty
for the return of Louisiana to France, clamped a cork back into the bottle of
the expanding West."
"Not without reason did the Spanish call the men who
came down from Mississippi, Tennessee, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Kentucky
'barbarians.' At the end of their
journeys they 'caroused, played practical jokes, swarmed into bordellos, gawked
in the churches, cluttered up the already filthy city with their rubbish,
blustered through crowds shouting lusty oaths, and in general disrupted life.'
" The Devil' Backbone - Jonathan Daniels
“Down the Trace General Wilkinson did very well, too. He was present at the peaceful transfer of
Louisiana to the United States at the Cabildo in New Orleans on December
20,1803. The departing French prefect,
Pierre Clement Laussat, reported to Paris about the pompous general, “already
known in a bad way, is a flighty and rattleheaded fellow, often drunk, who has
committed a hundred impertinent follies.” Describing General Wilkinson who
drove Jefferson crazy, was involved with the Trace, is suspected in history of
being a double agent for Spain, a friend of Aaron Burr and otherwise an all
around scoundrel who seemed to find a way to survive along the
Mississippi.
"In the character of a national hero, Lewis had huried
to Washington. There, as one reward,
Jefferson appointed him to succeed General Wilkinson, whose presence in St.
Louis ws no longer pleasing to so many, as governor of upper Louisiana. It was no plum that the President gave
Lewis."
“…the roughest among them began to talk with admiration of
how rugged the walking Jackson was. He
was tough as hickory, some said. And
Tennessee settlers knew which wood was toughest. Thereafter, his name in affection became then
and forever, “Old Hickory.”
Slipping into Paradise - Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson
I purchased Slipping into Paradise on the recommendation of a friend since I am planning a trip to New Zealand. Now that I have finished the book and am closer to my travels I find that I have very mixed responses to the publication and continue to be very excited about seeing "Paradise" first hand.
The Author is from the United States and is just 4 years older than me which makes connecting with the writing an interesting experience. I like his chatty form - he uses and it is an interesting book, but not the book I expected.
Photo from Amazon site.
His opening section talking about all the places he has lived and his opinions of various cultures and countries might be interesting in some context, but not this one. I wanted to slip in to paradise - not dwell on old wrongs, things he did not like about France, Germany, England and other places where he has lived his globe trotting life. I was not interested in his background with psychology and his personal history - I wanted to read about New Zealand.
Those backgrounds might give another reader pleasure and provide context for his discussions about New Zealand, but what I really enjoyed and what I recommend is his visit with Sir Edmund Hillary - New Zealand's international star and the first to climb Everest. It is the personality that comes out that makes me warm to both Hillary and the New Zealander.
Second is the chapter on the plants and birds of the island. It is the fact that this natural abundance, what is left of two of the most fascinating natural history islands on the planet, meant so much to him, despite that fact that he did not come as a botanist or bird watcher that is telling. Since I am coming as both it means that the beauty and diversity is still there despite the human propensity for destruction. The 800+ years of human habitation is still among the shortest of island development and the land forms isolation would have made it worthy of Darwin's inspiration for evolution.
The author provides a concise history of the island nation and mixes the European and the Moari, but he also points out that he was asked not to tell the more personal story of the Maori - they have had enough non-Moari try to do that already.
At the end he provides insights into his own travels, the places he likes, his perspective on the places he encounters and that is as close to a travel guide as it gets.
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