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Across the High Lonesome
James McNay Brumfield
Tres Picos Press
, 2006 - 400 pages
average customer review:
based on 8 reviews
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Sexist and silly, but entertaining
If you take this book with a grain of salt (or maybe a whole teaspoon of salt), you can enjoy it. I had to overlook some really awkward sentences and some unlikely sexual events, but I did find it to be a page turner. The scenery was well described and I liked reading about life as a packer, something you don't read about everyday.
Almost like being there
Having spent many days in the eastern sierras, I could almost see the
High
Lonesome
and terrain surrounding while reading this book. Very enjoyable and easy to read.
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Escape to the Mountains
It's easy to see why Brumfield was compelled to write this novel about mule packers in eastern California when you read his credentials in the back of the book. After 25 years as a wilderness guide and packer, Brumfield brought a little-known industry he loves to light. It's hard to categorize this book: part western, part romance, part tragedy, and all drama set in the mountainous national forests of California. Brumfield packs years worth of stories into one summer at Granite Creek Pack station with its romances and tawdry affairs, and triumphs and tragedies among an eclectic cast of characters whose love of the wilderness ties them all together.
Molly Mendoza is at a crossroads in her life. After discovering her fiancé in bed with her best friend, the perfect life she had planned is swept away, leaving her future exhilaratingly uncertain. On a whim, she accepts a summer job as a backcountry cook for Granite Creek and finds herself tossed headfirst in with the gang. She soon finds that Don Davidson, the handsome and charming man who hired her, is not well liked for good reason, while she finds her dislike for packer Dwight Broussard turning to not only passion but a close connection that frightens them both. Dwight had never taken anything in life too seriously, even through long and difficult winters, but he's starting to realize he may need a long-term plan and he might want Molly around past the end of the summer. The book also delves to a lesser degree into the lives of Molly and Dwight's compatriots as the summer plods along through the mountains.
As the book lacks a central thread to tie everything together, it reads like a series of short stories. Readers of "A Tourist in the Yucatan" (which Brumfield slyly and amusingly promotes several times throughout this novel) who were looking for another thriller may be disappointed that he didn't take the opportunity to centralize the stories going on around some sort of nefarious plot, but I appreciate all kinds of novels and understand why that might have destroyed the book's purity of purpose. I got the feeling that both Jake and Dwight were both semiautobiographical characters representing different periods in the author's life, as well as the other characters representing traits of people he has met along the way. The book's greatest value is what I think it was intended to do: shine a light on the lives of people who choose a physically demanding lifestyle over materialism for the sheer joy of being in the midst of one of the few wild places left in our country. While the writing is a bit stilted at times, the author somewhat uncomfortable with using contractions, the characters nonetheless came to life. I cared about what happened to most of them and felt their pain. I also felt like I learned about a different slice of life, and I'm glad Brumfield opened up this corner of the world for us to see. Perhaps now that this labor of love is under his belt, one of Brumfield's future novels can combine his love of the mountains with the thriller-writing abilities he displayed in "Tourist." Whatever he publishes next will be worth reading.
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Across
the
High
Lonesome
is a modern western odyssey that invites the reader to hitch a ride through the glacial carved vales and over the high lonesome passes of CaliforniaÕs ÒRange of Light.Ó A journey of love, pain and adventure, brimming with unforgettable characters, salty humor, and recalcitrant mules. Brumfield has taken a lifetime of experience packing dudes into the mountains and distilled it into a delightful work of fiction.
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