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So Wild a Dream (Rendezvous)
 
 
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So Wild a Dream (Rendezvous) [Hardcover]

Win Blevins (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Rendezvous September 1, 2003
Into a West too unmapped for the explorers, too bad for the badmen, too wild for any white men, came the mountain men. They blazed the trails across the Rocky Mountains, opened the vast country between the Missouri frontier and the Pacific, and rose into legend.

Sam Morgan has itchy feet and a hungry spirit. In 1822 life near Pittsburgh is far too hemmed in. He cares nothing for commerce or industry. He nurtures a wild dream of a woodsman's life, a truly free American life.

But where? Down the Ohio River? Up the Mississippi? Perhaps the far West. Since Captains Lewis and Clark came back, people are telling stories about the Shining Mountains.

Along the way Sam finds companions and adventures. For guidance, a half-breed Delaware Indian and Captain William Clark himself. For friends, a con man, a madam, and an assortment of shaggy men who have tasted the waters of those mountains.

Sam first learns the fur trade from Bible-toting Jedediah Smith and Irish Tom Fitzpatrick, both already becoming legends. He also learns from the Indians. At the Ree villages, he comes face to face with treachery and instant death; among the Crows, he learns love of a woman; from the Bois Brules, Snakes, Pawnees, and other tribes, he learns native crafts, lore, and mysticism.

But his great teacher is hard-won experience. He makes a grueling seven-hundred-mile trek, alone and on foot, across the Great Plains to Fort Atkinson on the Missouri. On the way he survives a holocaust of a prairie fire and learns the price of survival in the pitiless Western wilds, and something of who he is and wants to become.

Not since Frederick Manfred's Lord Grizzly and Vardis Fisher's Mountain
Man has there been so gripping, authentic, and captivating a story of the men
who matched the mountains of the Great American West.


Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Life in rural Pennsylvania in the 1820s doesn't hold much appeal for young, adventurous, ambitious Sam Morgan. He decides to make his life--and maybe his fortune--on the frontier, but his first step is to get there. He secures a job as a hand on a riverboat, and the adventure begins. His crewmates are the usual assortment of rascals, rapscallions, and borderline crooks, among them a half-breed Delaware Indian, a scam artist, a wily riverboat captain, and a former prostitute who may be more dangerous than any of her companions. In their travels up and down the rivers, the crew experience a multitude of adventures, including a bloody confrontation with two brothers who had been bounced from the crew. Sam provides muscle on the boat, and his marksmanship keeps the crew supplied with fresh game when they anchor at nightfall. Author Blevins, an expert on early American fur trade, introduces his Rendezvous series with this entertaining, vivid portrait of frontier America as seen through the eyes of an impressionable youth. Wes Lukowsky
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review

Praise for Win Blevins:

"Win Blevins has long since won his place among the West's very best."
--Tony Hillerman

"Blevins possesses a rare skill in masterfully telling a story-to-paper. He is a true storyteller in the tradition of Native people."
-- Lee Francis, Associate Professor of Native American Studies, University of New Mexico

"One of the finest novels to come out of the American West in a long time...an amazing book, grandly conceived, beautifully written."
-- Dallas Morning News on Stone Song

"RavenShadow has the impact of a hurled war lance."
--Dee Brown, author of Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Forge Books; First Edition edition (September 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765305739
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765305732
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.8 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,191,861 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I came out of Missouri and Arkansas, of Irish, Welsh, and Cherokee heritage. After a whirlwind of colleges and jobs, I discovered that books are my calling, and I've written more than twenty, primarily about mountain men and Indian people. Though awards are less important than readers, I'm glad when they come, and was delighted to be named Writer of the Year in 2003 by Wordcraft Circle of Native writers.

I live with my wife Meredith, the novelist, in a remote corner of the canyonlands of Utah.

 

Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A story of amazing courage, endurance, and resourcefulness, December 28, 2003
This review is from: So Wild a Dream (Rendezvous) (Hardcover)
The first volume in the Rendezvous Series, So Wild a Dream is a thoroughly enjoyable tale of struggle and survival in the wilderness of the Great American West in the early 19th century.

The time is 1822. The protagonist is Sam Morgan, 18, who, bored with civilization and "following his wild hair," leaves his home in Morgantown, twenty miles up the Allegheny River from Pittsburgh, and sets out on an adventurous trek toward the Shining Mountains of his dreams.

In Part One, "Venturing Forth," Sam travels on a flatboat down the Ohio to Cincinnati, Louisville, and Evansville, and up the Mississippi to St. Louis. He meets colorful characters (card sharks, con men, flimflam artists), visits shady places (taverns, booze dens, gambling halls, cathouses), and experiences barroom brawls and a mugging.

In Part Two, "Indian Country," Sam enters alien territory, where people are no longer "civilized" but are "savages," although Sam wonders if there is any real difference between the two.

Stalking that wily rodent, the beaver, Sam and his fellow fur traders meet Native Americans of various tribes, some friendly, some hostile: the Crow, the Sioux, the Cheyenne, the Snake, the Blackfeet, the Rees, the Bois Brules, and the Pawnee.

Sam falls in love with Meadowlark, a beautiful young Crow woman of the Gray Hawk family. The romance is cut short, however, when the expedition pushes on westward, where the voyagers face starvation in the snow-covered mountains and desperate combat with Indian warriors.

Part Three, "The Journey," is the best part of Blevins' tale. Separated from his companions, Sam struggles to rejoin civilization on a seven-week, seven-hundred-mile trek back to Fort Atkinson on the Missouri River. Along the way he finds a "bosom buddy" (literally) in Coy, a coyote pup, who shows him the only escape from the holocaust of a prairie fire.

Emerging from his baptism of ice and fire, the man who came to the end of the journey was not the same man who started out. Sam had become a mountain man, a man who, in Part Four, "The Return," is virtually a stranger to his family and friends.

So Wild a Dream is a story of amazing courage, endurance, and resourcefulness. To use Mr. Blevins' language, if I "know fat cow from poor bull," this novel is a winner; "it shines."

Win Blevins is an authority on the Plains Indians and the fur-trade era of the West. His rollicking tribute to the mountain man, Give Your Heart to the Hawks, remains in print thirty years after its first publication; his novel of Crazy Horse, Stone Song, earned several prestigious literary prizes; and such novels as Charbonneau, The Rock Child, and Raven Shadow have established him as among the best of writers of the West. He lives in Utah's Canyonlands with his wife, Meredith, also a novelist.

Roy E. Perry of Nolensville, Tennessee, is an advertising copywriter at a Nashville publishing house.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great edge-of-your-seat story, June 8, 2008
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This review is from: So Wild a Dream (Rendezvous) (Hardcover)
When I started reading this book, my eyes rolled back into my head. "Oh, gosh, this is going to be trash!" I thought. But after the first few pages, an incredible story, so well told with great imagery, unfolded, and I could hardly put it down. I found myself telling friends about it as if it were a movie. I cannot wait for the author's next book!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good historical fiction epic, August 13, 2006
By 
Marisa (Beaverton, OR, United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
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So Wild a Dream starts off a little slow, but quickly picks up pace to become an exciting portrayal of the life of Sam Morgan, a naive teenager with a unquenchable thirst for adventure who, in the course of the book, becomes a veritable "mountain man." I enjoyed all the historical details and the fact that many of the characters and events are real.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Sam always took a long time looking down into it first, and listening. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
way the stick floats, patch knife, third wing, possible sack, hunting pouch, giant brothers, half dimes, fur men, shot pouch, jerked meat, mountain men, fall hunt, rawhide rope
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Captain Stuart, Blue Medicine Horse, Diah Smith, New Orleans, Sam Morgan, Captain Smith, General Ashley, Gray Hawk, Grey Eyes, Miss Abigail, Rocky Mountains, Edward Rose, Fort Atkinson, Missouri Fur, Fort Kiowa, Sly Stuart, Rides Twice, Wind River, Big Dipper, John Bill, Missouri River, Plantation House, Tom Eddie, Velva Mae, Lew Morgan
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