I Should Be Extremely Happy in Your Company: A Novel of Lewis and Clark

by Brian Hall | Literature & Fiction |
ISBN: 0142003719 Global Overview for this book
Registered by saram23 of Lowell, Massachusetts USA on 11/2/2004
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3 journalers for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by saram23 from Lowell, Massachusetts USA on Tuesday, November 2, 2004
I got about 100 pages into this book before I gave up. I read this in an attempt to join a book club, but when I decided not to join I still had the book and felt I should still read it. I felt that, while the parts about Lewis or Clark were understandable, everything about Sacagawea was nearly impossible to follows. Also, I was never really interested in this story.
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From Publishers Weekly
Though it joins a crowded field of Lewis and Clark narratives, this formidable third novel by Hall (The Saskiad) is not to be dismissed. Narrated in multiple distinct voices, this retelling of the story of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark's legendary expedition is less a historical blow-by-blow than an engaging character study of the two men. Hall focuses on a few significant episodes in the journey-such as the hunting accident that wounds Lewis and causes him to sink into his famous depression-as seen through the eyes of Lewis, Sacagawea, Clark and Toussaint Charbonneau, Sacagawea's French fur trader husband. The result is a memorable portrait of the expedition leaders. Lewis is melancholy but ambitious and erudite, worried that he doesn't have the literary skill to render their adventures and discoveries. The sunnier Clark has the sensibility of an artist and the courage of a soldier, but he lacks the fortitude and discipline to build on his advantages. Hall is especially interested in the encounters between Native Americans and white explorers, and he details the violent struggles with Blackfeet Indians and others. Some readers may become frustrated with Sacagawea's stream-of-consciousness narration, in which proper nouns are not capitalized ("she remembered the raids in her own time, the one near beaver's head on blue crow's camp by the blackshoes when two bears' older brother (this one's bigfather), wolf tooth, was killed along with his son, chalk"), but the lyrical and precise prose will reward those who stick with it. In any case, such distractions are minor when measured against the rest of Hall's vivid, enthralling tableau.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc

Journal Entry 2 by saram23 from Lowell, Massachusetts USA on Sunday, February 27, 2005
not traveling yet so I removed the entry about it.

Released 19 yrs ago (3/14/2005 UTC) at Mail in Live Journal/Book Crossing Bookbox 1, A Bookbox -- Controlled Releases

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This is one of the initial books in the box!

Journal Entry 4 by saram23 from Lowell, Massachusetts USA on Tuesday, April 12, 2005
this didn't get selected from the box so I will keep it and send it to someone else.

Journal Entry 5 by nancyluvsbooks from Williamsburg, Virginia USA on Wednesday, April 20, 2005
Received from saram23 in a trade. Thanks so much!

Journal Entry 6 by Rita-Booke from Bartlett, Tennessee USA on Saturday, January 20, 2007
"A novel of Lewis and Clark" . . . sounds like nothing I've read before. Looking forward to diving in.

Journal Entry 7 by Rita-Booke at Starbucks - Stage And Kirby Whitten in Bartlett, Tennessee USA on Saturday, January 16, 2016

Released 8 yrs ago (1/16/2016 UTC) at Starbucks - Stage And Kirby Whitten in Bartlett, Tennessee USA

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In Christmas bag with a few others

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