WESTERING WOMEN by Sandra
Dallas
Characters are all important in this book that relates what
it might have been like for a group of women, two ministers (who arranged the
trip), and a few men (to drive the teams) traveling by wagon across the country
from Chicago to the gold fields of California in 1852. The object was to provide the men working the
male dominated gold fields with honorable women as brides and co-workers.
The women, their reasons for making the perilous journey,
their personalities and their growing sisterhood are the basis for the book. Dallas
excels at characterization and the book shines because of her deftness in examining
the women through the hardships and dangers of the trip. Maggie, the main
character, carries lies, burdens, secrets, and fear with her as do many of the
other women. None are prepared for the
trek through plains, mountains and deserts as they make their way across the
country.
Although the hardships of the journey are made clear, this
book is about the women. The epilogue
informs us of the resolution for each of the women the reader has come to know
intimately.
Book groups will find much to discuss, including answering
the questions “Would you have made this trip?” and “Would you have survived?”
5 of 5 stars
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