"Read him." -- George Elliott Clarke, author of I & I and George
and Rue
An award-winning author goes looking for the meaning of family and
belonging on a glorious wild-goose-chase road trip across middle
America
Wangersky's great-great-grandfather crossed the continent in search of
gold in 1849. William Castle Dodge was his name, and he was 22 years
old. He wrote a diary of that eventful journey that comes into the
author's hands 160 years later. And typically, quixotically, Wangersky
decides to follow Dodge's westward trail across the great bulging middle
of America, not in search of gold but something even less likely: that
elusive thing called family.
What ensues becomes this story, by turns hilarious and profound, about a
very long trip -- by car, in Wangersky's case, and on mule and foot in
Dodge's. Interweaving his experiences on the road with Dodge's diary,
the author contemplates the human need to hunt for roots and meaning as
he -- and Dodge -- encounter immigrants who risk everything to be
somewhere else, while only glimpsing those who are there already and who
want to hold onto their claim in the stream of human migration.
Same Ground is a story about what time washes away and what persists
-- and what we might find, unexpectedly, if we go looking.