A sweeping, gorgeously written novel of Lewis and Clark's legendary
expedition, named one of the best novels of the year by The Boston
Globe, Salon, The Los Angeles Times, and The Christian Science
Monitor.
Brian Hall's compulsively readable novel vividly re-creates Lewis and
Clark's extraordinary journey into the unknown western frontier.
Focusing on the emblematic moments of the participants' lives, the story
unfolds through the perspectives of four competing voices--from the
troubled and mercurial figure of Meriwether Lewis, the expedition leader
who found that it was impossible to enter paradise without having it
crumble around him, to Sacagawea, the Shoshone girl-captive and
interpreter for the expedition, whose short life mirrored the disruptive
times in which she lived. Bringing the day-to-day life of the expedition
alive as no work of history ever could, Hall's magnificent novel fills
in the gaps and provides a new perspective on the most famous journey in
American history.