The Sierra Nevada, with its 14,000-foot granite mountains, crystalline
lakes, conifer forests, and hidden valleys, has long been the domain of
dreams, attracting the heroic and the delusional, the best of humanity
and the worst. Stories abound, and characters emerge so outlandish and
outrageous that they have to be real. Could the human imagination have
invented someone like Eliza Gilbert? Born in Limerick, Ireland, in 1818,
she transformed herself into Lola Montez, born in Seville, Spain, in
1823, and brought to the Gold Country the provocative "Spider
Dance"--impersonating a young woman repelling a legion of angry spiders
under her petticoats. Or Otto Esche, who in 1860 imported fifteen
two-humped Bactrian camels from Asia to transport goods to the mines. Or
the artist Albert Bierstadt, whose paintings Mark Twain characterized as
having "more the atmosphere of Kingdom-Come than of California." Or
multimillionaire George Whittell Jr., who was frequently spotted driving
around Lake Tahoe in a luxurious convertible with his pet lion in the
front seat. These, and scores more, spill out of the pages of this
well-illustrated and lively tribute to the Sierra by a native son.