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The Last Crossing: A Novel (Paperback)

by Guy Vanderhaeghe (Author)
Key Phrases: crooked back, young badger, whisky posts, Lucy Stoveall, Fort Benton, Charles Gaunt (more...)
4.3 out of 5 stars See all reviews (39 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
This sweeping epic novel of the search for a lost Englishman in the raw Indian territories of the U.S.-Canadian Western borderlands in the late 19th century was a Canadian bestseller and award-winner last year, but has only just made it here. That's puzzling, for Vanderhaeghe (The Englishman's Boy) is a prodigiously gifted writer who makes the West, its fierce weathers, rugged landscapes and contrary characters come to life in a way comparable to McMurtry at his best. He tells of the disappearance on the prairie of a wealthy and idealistic young Englishman, Simon Gaunt, in the company of a devious missionary who is later found dead. Simon's tyrannical father sends brothers Charles and Addington to see if they can find out what happened to him and if, by chance, he is still alive. The dreamy, artistic Charles and the preening, choleric Addington get together with a Scots-Indian half-breed, Jerry Potts (a real person of the time), as their guide and set out into a wilderness inhabited only by warring Indian tribes and rogue traders selling them whiskey. They are accompanied by Lucy Stoveall, a tough beauty in search of the renegades who raped and murdered her young sister, and Custis Straw, a battered Civil War veteran desperately in love with her. Their adventures are pulse-poundingly exciting and graphic, and if the book has a fault it is that it is almost overstuffed with drama and incident. A pair of brilliant set pieces-Straw's memories of a bloody Civil War battle, and a murderous encounter between warring Indian tribes-are not really essential to the narrative, and the elegiac ending seems oddly off-key. But the book's rewards far transcend these excesses, and no reader once embarked on this hugely involving adventure will be able to stop until it is done.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist
*Starred Review* If this historical novel uses a fairly common storytelling device--a group of mismatched characters embarks on a quest--its quality is decidedly uncommon. In 1870 idealistic English missionary Simon Gaunt disappears in a Montana blizzard. The family patriarch directs brothers Charles, a painter, and Addington, a soldier, to find their sibling, whether alive or dead. Charles misses Simon terribly; Addington looks forward to touring the West. The Gaunts aren't the only ones with different agendas. The search party that departs from Fort Benton eventually includes Lucy Stoveall, a laundress chasing her sister's murderer; Custis Straw, a haunted Civil War veteran in love with Lucy; and Jerry Potts, a half-breed guide torn between worlds. Despite Addington's increasingly erratic command, most of the travelers' desires are fulfilled, albeit in unexpected fashion and not always in due time. Popular Canadian writer Vanderhaeghe (The Englishman's Boy, 1996) moves deftly between present and past, between exterior and interior landscapes, choosing unique and telling details. Especially excellent are first-person passages in which richly individual voices give the story the pulse of life. Underlying themes are fertile: the construction of identity, the lure of wildness, and the scars inflicted by civilization. Should find a wide readership. Keir Graff
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 416 pages
  • Publisher: Grove Press (November 30, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0802141757
  • ISBN-13: 978-0802141750
  • Product Dimensions: 8 x 5.5 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars See all reviews (39 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #127,219 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Customer Reviews

39 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (39 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Top-notch, February 2, 2004
This review is from: The Last Crossing (Hardcover)
The good news is that Canadian writer Guy Vanderhaeghe has published six other books besides this one. This is important because once you finishedhis new novel "The Last Crossing" you will be scouring libraries, bookstores, and the internet for more.

What a good writer! His 1996 novel "The Englishman's Boy" was also excellent, but his newest book reaches an even higher level. His use of multiple points of view is marvelous and the characters have a depth and appeal that adds excitement, pathos, and surprise to a really good plot.

In the 1870's, a young Englishman named Simon Gaunt travels into Montana as a missionary and vanishes. His difficult, heartbroken father orders his two other sons to go to Ft. Benton and find him at all costs. Addington is a disgraced military man and Simon's twin Charles is a painter disappointed in himself for his own shallow nature. Charles is desperate to find Simon but Addington seems to look on the whole trip as one big outdoor adventure, showing up at the fort with a seedy, sycophantic "newspaperman" who plans to record Addington's feats in the wilderness for the penny press. They contract the Blackfoot/Scottish guide Jerry Potts to lead them, but by the time the Gaunts' wagons leave Ft. Benton, they have also collected a woman searching for her sister's killer and are trailed by the man who loves her, and who in turn is trailed by his best friend. The search for the missing missionary is in danger of being derailed by the quirks and passions of his search party. But Simon Gaunt remains the lodestar for this group, and only later do we find out why.

"The Last Crossing" is satisfying, readable, thoughtful, and thrilling. If you have not read Guy Vanderhaeghe before, he is a wonderful discovery.

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Duty, honor, and love, sublimely rendered, January 11, 2004
Once in awhile, a book comes along that haunts its readers' thoughts for years. The Last Crossing is such a book.

Set in the latter part of the 1800s, in the western U.S. and Canada, and in Victorian England, this is a tale of a a man lost in the wilderness, and those who seek to find him, including his very stiff British father, two very different brothers, a pair of star-crossed lovers, a quirky journalist, a saloon-keeper, and an Indian guide. They all suffer from painful pasts that taunt them into life-changing courses of action.

Telling the story from their own points of view, the characters look back at their own lives. This drives each of them to live up to their sense of duty, to defend their own honor, and ultimately to act in one way or another because they either love, or can't love.

Scenes of the early west tear at the heart--caravans, Indian villages, conflicts, battles, disease, death, tragedy, comic relief. And love, sometimes unrequited, and at a distance. There is one scene that will stay with me for years. In it, two lovers find each other, their desperate searches ending and beginning in an instant. The night air, the stars, the prairie wind and their hearts carry them to where they couldn't dream of going.

The characters speak with undeniable truth to and about themselves. They narrate, but also wonder about their own personal honor and how they can love despite their pasts and the hard lessons that duty and love teach them.

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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Lively melodrama of the Northwest frontier in the 1870s., February 29, 2004
This review is from: The Last Crossing (Hardcover)
In this broad saga of the New Territories, from Montana into Canada, Guy Vanderhaeghe brings to life the search of two Englishmen for their lost brother, Simon Gaunt, who has pursued a charismatic preacher in the hopes of converting the Indians to Christianity. No word has been heard from him in over a year. While twin brother Charles genuinely misses Simon, older brother Addington sees the search as a grand, selfish adventure-an excuse to hunt at his father's expense. The three brothers share the same blood and have had the same upbringing, but they have taken very different paths in life, and the sojourn in North America provides the stimulus which allows each one to discover his own inner nature. As Addington becomes more brutal and selfish, Charles becomes more sensitive and realistic. Gradually, an image of Simon emerges, through Charles's descriptions, as a "man dreaming so deeply as to be incapable of wakening to reality."

As the search party departs, every member is seeking some kind of love, acceptance, and a sense of connection to the wider world. Jerry Potts, the scout, is half Scots and half Blackfoot Indian and yearns for his small son from whom he is estranged. Lucy Stoveall is searching for the brutal killers of her 13-year-old sister Madge Dray. Custis Straw, who loves Lucy, suffers from nightmares about the Civil War and the loss of his family. Addington, who becomes deranged as time progresses, hunts and kills animals and Indians for the sheer bloodlust. Constant motifs of blood and bloodlines pervade the novel, as the trip challenges each member to understand who s/he is by birth and who s/he has become through the accidents of history.

The great Northwest, with the power and grandeur of its scenery, its wildlife, and its rapidly changing weather provides for innumerable dramatic scenes. The honorable and caring Lucy and the venal Addington are as much the personifications of good and evil as the heroines and villains in western melodrama. Ultimately, all the plot elements unite in a satisfying conclusion which extends twenty-five years beyond the search for Simon and ties up loose ends. Rousing and absorbing, this melodrama highlights the settlement of the frontier at the expense of Indian cultures, and one can almost hear echoes of a melancholy honkytonk piano in the background. Mary Whipple

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Sluggish
This book was packed with historical detail, but I found the narrative sluggish. At times, I felt many of the passages should have been left to the "backstory" (i.e. Read more
Published 9 months ago by Marianne

2.0 out of 5 stars Too intense for me
I'll admit up front that I only read the first 50 pages, but I just couldn't keep reading it because of its graphic nature. Read more
Published 22 months ago by Ananda E. Peters

5.0 out of 5 stars The Gaunts Put the 'Dis' in Dysfunctional
Young Englishman Simon Gaunt, religious zealot, has gone missing in the Old American West (specifically Canada). Read more
Published on September 5, 2006 by Douglas S. Wood

5.0 out of 5 stars Great read. Definitely recommended
Richly painted and diverse characters fill a story highlighting American and Canadian Western Frontier history. Read more
Published on June 13, 2006 by Herman P. Haas

4.0 out of 5 stars Won't Find Better Writing
You won't be able to find any better writing than this. Frequently I had to stop just to admire the wordsmithing I had just encountered. Mr. Read more
Published on March 9, 2005 by Richard A. Mitchell

3.0 out of 5 stars An interesting Mix
Historical fiction with a modern eye overseeing all. Learned about some new people, but the pacing left a lot to be desired.
Published on February 17, 2005 by John Bowes

5.0 out of 5 stars Fabulous!
I loved this book and could not put it down. The story is interesting and the writing is wonderful. His characters are rich and complex. Read more
Published on February 16, 2005 by madcarrot

5.0 out of 5 stars Hard to put down!
Stunning, rich, exquisite characterization, finely-honed plot...you name it and this book has it. Guy Vanderhaeghe has re-created a historical period here that is timeless and... Read more
Published on December 29, 2004 by S. Jones

5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing!!!
I don't read many books (oh I've got enough hobbies to kill a horse), but on a tip from a friend I picked this one up. And did I enjoy it? It is amazing. Amazing. Read more
Published on December 19, 2004 by Lisa Mitchell

4.0 out of 5 stars Fine Novel by a Skilled Author
The Last Crossing is a soulful story of several colorful characters who come together for various reasons to trek across the North American Midwest in the 1800s. Read more
Published on November 24, 2004 by Bruce Rhodes

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