Published in 1898 in Toronto, this stirring account of life in the
Canadian Northwest at the turn of the twentieth century includes stories
of Aboriginal life, camping, dogs, buffalo, epidemic, path blazing,
horse thievery, gambling, polygamy, wolves, hunting, storytelling,
broiled owlets, schooling in the university of frontier life,
missionaries, war parties, bear ribs, feasting and fasting, wonderful
mirages, wild rhubarb, death of a friend, road making, a plunge into icy
water. The author, John McDougall, was a third-generation Canadian from
Upper Canada. He spent his life working, playing, and earning the trust
of the Aboriginal people.