Letters from Yellowstone
Registered by LaveggioCoffee of Binghamton, New York USA on 5/9/2015
This book is in a Controlled Release!
2 journalers for this copy...
purchased this one at our local library booksale.
I really enjoyed this one. I have not visited Yellowstone yet, but this gives you a glimpse into what it would have been like for a woman in the late nineteenth century traveling into the "wild".
Inside Flap: Set in the late nineteenth century against the backdrop of one of America's most famous wild pplaces, Diane Smith's vivid debut novel tells of a young woman's dramatic journey to a greater understanding of her place in the world.
A.E. Bartram is a high-spirited medical student from the East whose real passion is botany. In the spring of 1898, she is invited to join a field study in Yellowstone National Park when its leader, Howard Merriam, a mild-mannered professor from Montana, mistakenly assumes she is a man. Once the scientists get over the shock of having a woman on their team, we follow their experience over the course of a summer of adventure and collecting as they move from Mammoth Hot Springs to a camp high in the backcountry.....
I really enjoyed this one. I have not visited Yellowstone yet, but this gives you a glimpse into what it would have been like for a woman in the late nineteenth century traveling into the "wild".
Inside Flap: Set in the late nineteenth century against the backdrop of one of America's most famous wild pplaces, Diane Smith's vivid debut novel tells of a young woman's dramatic journey to a greater understanding of her place in the world.
A.E. Bartram is a high-spirited medical student from the East whose real passion is botany. In the spring of 1898, she is invited to join a field study in Yellowstone National Park when its leader, Howard Merriam, a mild-mannered professor from Montana, mistakenly assumes she is a man. Once the scientists get over the shock of having a woman on their team, we follow their experience over the course of a summer of adventure and collecting as they move from Mammoth Hot Springs to a camp high in the backcountry.....
Journal Entry 2 by LaveggioCoffee at Wrap It Up Bookbox, A Bookbox -- Controlled Releases on Thursday, May 21, 2015
Released 8 yrs ago (5/21/2015 UTC) at Wrap It Up Bookbox, A Bookbox -- Controlled Releases
CONTROLLED RELEASE NOTES:
sent in watermixie's Wrap It up bookbox to the next in line.
Happy Travels
Happy Travels
Taken from waternixie's wrap-it-up bookbox.
I had some idea that this book was a compilation of actual letters from the 1800s, from Yellowstone. But it isn't. It is a set of fictional letters set in that time, from various people involved in a field study in Yellowstone National Park. The protagonist is A.E. Bartram, a botany student who is excited to join the team. The leader of the team, Howard Merriam, is not aware that A. E. is a woman, and initially he is put off by this.
But A. E. (Alexandria, Alex) proves herself to be a good researcher: enthusiastic, knowledgable, and capable of learning. The rest of the team and those who are involved from afar are not immediately taken by having a woman in the group, but they defer to the leader.
The letters are fun to read, revealing as they do the nature of the work, the relationships among the people involved, and some of the beauty that is Yellowstone. The hotel featured in the book is real and still exists, albeit remodeled, of course.
I enjoyed the development of the characters and did not mind too much the somewhat flowery language employed in the letters. It's true that many people wrote that way at the time, though I doubt that they spoke the same way. Alex's character may be a bit out of sync for the time, but at the same time we read a lot of rather victorian attitude in the letters. I'm not sure that this attitude had invaded all of society at the time, given that at any time there is a mix of cultures and attitudes.
Overall I found it quite enjoyable and it whets my appetite for visiting Yellowstone.
But A. E. (Alexandria, Alex) proves herself to be a good researcher: enthusiastic, knowledgable, and capable of learning. The rest of the team and those who are involved from afar are not immediately taken by having a woman in the group, but they defer to the leader.
The letters are fun to read, revealing as they do the nature of the work, the relationships among the people involved, and some of the beauty that is Yellowstone. The hotel featured in the book is real and still exists, albeit remodeled, of course.
I enjoyed the development of the characters and did not mind too much the somewhat flowery language employed in the letters. It's true that many people wrote that way at the time, though I doubt that they spoke the same way. Alex's character may be a bit out of sync for the time, but at the same time we read a lot of rather victorian attitude in the letters. I'm not sure that this attitude had invaded all of society at the time, given that at any time there is a mix of cultures and attitudes.
Overall I found it quite enjoyable and it whets my appetite for visiting Yellowstone.
Sent to paperbackswap member.