Bad Land: An American Romance"When Dad came out here, he had twenty-five dollars, a wagon, and a mule". So begins the stories of countless homesteaders who, in the first decades of this century, seized an astounding government offer: three hundred and twenty free acres in the stark, dry Plains of Montana and the Dakotas. Seduced by the promises from railroad companies, by liberal credit from bankers, and by scientific claims about dry-land farming; seduced, above all, by the prospect of a new life in the New World, Americans and Europeans came determined to put down roots and prosper. In Bad Land, Jonathan Raban imaginatively re-creates the austere terrain that once housed their hopes; he portrays the people whose dreams foundered there and the survivors who endured amidst the ruins of those who fled. He brings to life the deserted homesteads and recaptures the voices of those immigrants for whom the bare prairie represented a fantastic choice of personal renewal. With razor-sharp acuity and wit Raban makes clear that our notion of the West as a realm of settled communities peopled by farmers and small-town merchants has always been more imaginary than real. His portrait of this least-known region of the Unites States strips away the myth - while preserving the romance - that has shrouded our understanding of it. Bad Land is at once a revelatory and moving journey into the forlorn soul of our heartland. |
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LibraryThing Review
User Review - Jared_Runck - LibraryThingLike Michael Pollan's "The Omnivore's Dilemma," I still can't really tell you what this book "is" or why I liked it so much. I suppose its most proper generic category would be "cultural geography ... Read full review
LibraryThing Review
User Review - mldavis2 - LibraryThingWinner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for Non-Fiction, this book on the history of the railroads and settlers in Montana earns its ratings. Partly history, partly a travelogue across ... Read full review
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