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A Lady's Life in the Rocky Mountains

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From sickly child to pioneering Victorian explorer, Isabella Bird defied convention. After back surgery in 1850 and the recommendation of life in the open air, she finally looked her malaise and her pain in the eye and set off across the world completely alone. In Colorado she covered 800 miles on horseback, climbing mountains, wrangling cattle, sleeping in snow and finding herself drawn to a violent, one-eyed outlaw with a soft spot for poetry, known as 'Mountain Jim'. With the writing skills to match her spirit of adventure, she documented her journey in these letters to her sister, which were published as a collection in 1879. She was a true trailblazer – a Victorian woman of 4'11" with debilitating pain who chose to blow open life's limits.

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    • Library Journal

      Starred review from September 1, 2023

      Clare Wille's delightful narration of Bird's trek on horseback across 800 miles of Colorado is as crystal clear and shimmering as the Rocky Mountain skies she describes. In this collection of letters to Bird's sister, first published in 1879, the British explorer tells of her 1873 journey eastward from California, heading to the grandeur of the Rocky Mountains. Wille picks up the pace as Bird meets eccentric characters along the way and sees danger in each mining town or snowstorm. She shows disgust for the incessantly digging prairie dogs and the silver mines blighting the landscape, is unsettled by creepy sounds made by critters living in cabins, and communicates the loneliness of being out in the cold and sleeping on snow. Wille captures Bird's disdain for gun violence, especially when mixed with whiskey and lawlessness, and nails her fascination with "Rocky Mountain" Jim Nugent, her companion while climbing Longs Peak, and the sadness felt when learning of his death. There is also an intense time when Bird is down to her last few cents, with no access to her funds. VERDICT Armchair explorers will savor this spirited woman's journey, taken nearly 150 years ago.--Stephanie Bange

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      What a treat it is to listen to Clare Wille perform this engrossing narrative by nineteenth-century British travel writer and naturalist Isabella Bird. The audiobook consists of a series of letters that Bird wrote to her sister during Bird's travels throughout the American West in the late nineteenth century. Wille's wonderfully expressive tone, bright English intonation, and exceptionally clear enunciation accentuate Bird's extraordinary writing. Whether by a sharp observation, or a few descriptive sentences, Bird precisely illuminates her adventurous trips by horseback and train, the locals she meets, and the remarkable landscapes and wildlife she views. Wille's wondrous performance transforms this collection into a theatrical experience for the ears. Listeners should be forewarned of language employed for various ethnic groups that will offend contemporary sensibilities. M.J. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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