Walking West
A Novel
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
About the great migration west, Edna Ferber wrote, "I am not belittling the brave pioneer men, but the sunbonnet as well as the sombrero helped to settle this glorious land of ours." These westering foremothers take center stage in Walking West, Noelle Sickels's remarkable first novel of women and their families on a grueling wagon train journey across the United States.
In the wet spring of 1852, a small band of Indiana farm families set off for California, lured west by the promise of a better life. The Muller party crosses treacherous rivers, slogs through mud and thunderstorms, and hauls wagons up and down mountains and over baking deserts in a seven-month journey across our raw continent.
Among them is Alice Muller, a reluctant traveler forced to leave home by her husband Henry's dreams of prosperity. But the Mullers greatly underestimate the hardships they will face, and it is ultimately Alice who must draw on the deepest reserves of body and soul to lead the little group of bone-weary emigrants through their final miles. In doing so, Alice changes from a dutiful farm wife into a woman capable of deep commitment, strong actions, and profound self-knowledge.
Noelle Sickels's novel takes readers across America--through Fort Laramie, Chimney Rock, the Black Hills, the Rockies, and the Sierras--and into the minds of her extraordinary characters. Offering a woman's perspective on a historical period more often portrayed through the male icons of cowboys, outlaws, and gold seekers, Walking West combines history and storytelling in a novel of astonishing authenticity and emotional power.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The westward expansion of the American frontier in the mid-1800s is expertly chronicled in Sickels's heartrending first novel. In 1852, the Muller party of 17 family members and friends sets out from the lush farmland of Indiana, lured by the promise of greater prosperity in California. As they walk alongside their hulking oxen and heavily laden wagons, Alice and Henry Muller, their two children and the others bravely face the unknown and unexpected. Across the plains of Nebraska, through the Black Hills, over the Rockies and across the parched deserts of Nevada, the party endures mile after dusty mile of hardship and sacrifice. Dangerous river crossings, severe weather, accidents, desertion and disease conspire to test the Mullers' love and commitment as a family until only the women and children are left, with Alice as their leader. Historically accurate in its scope and detail, this is a stirring and soulful tale of triumph over despair.