I like the style of the book, it really pulls you into the struggles and atmosphere of the time in which these explorers lived. Before I read this book I did not adequately appreciate how amazing it is that America is actually as large as it is, nor did I realize how un-united Americans were even shortly after the war for Independence. Some of the accounts were a bit awkward, for instance someone goes to meet someone but is told that the person they want to meet with is (I'm paraphrasing with modern lingo) using the bathroom so they need to wait. It was an actual accounting…I would never have thought that something like that would have made it in someone's diary, but it did! There were immoral practices that are referenced in the books as well (such as prostitution), and at least one of the guys sent out to survey land wasn't very principled in morals. So I'd suggest being careful if one is reading this with kids. But otherwise I think that it is a very intriguing and informative account of a major part of the beginning of the formation of what is now the United States.
Before I end this I just want to mention that I found Fenster's point that the 18th century was a very quiet era compared to ours very interesting. They didn't have a lot of very loud noises while we experience them all of the time, cars, planes and even music. She mentions this when she gives Dunbar's account of hearing a waterfall and describing it as the sound of "horrid din of a hurricane in New Orleans in the year 1779". I had never thought about that before, that our time-period is much louder than the ones before it. Anyway, this is quite an intriguing history book, it includes maps and pictures in its pages as well!
Thanks to Blogging for Books for sending me a free review copy of this book(My review did not have to be favorable)
This book may be purchased at (among other places): Amazon.com
No comments:
Post a Comment