Description
A journey into the complicated environment of the North American interior in the early decades of the nineteenth century. Written with clarity and energy, it tells its story through the remarkable device of a triple biography. -- Gregory Evans Dowd, author of Groundless: Rumors, Legends, and Hoaxes on the Early American Frontier Catton makes me think that there must be a gene for historical writing. In this marvelously crafted book, he uses a quarrel over the custody of children in the early nineteenth century to reveal the fraying of the hybrid Indian/white world of the lands neighboring the Great Lakes. This is a deeply human story of a nineteenth-century world that was in the midst of great change. A compelling, surprising, and dramatic account that reads like historical fiction. -- Richard White, author of The Middle Ground: Indians, Empires, and Republics in the Great Lakes Region, 1650-1815
About the Author
Theodore Catton is an associate research professor of history at the University of Montana. He is the author of Inhabited Wilderness: Indians, Eskimos, and Alaska's National Parks and American Indians and National Forests.
Reviews
Catton's riveting story is exquisitely written and well-researched. A must-read for anyone interested in frontier history.
-Library Journal
Catton has produced a remarkable work of narrative nonfiction. 'Rainy Lake House' deserves a place on any history buff's bookshelf alongside other excellent examples of frontier history narratives, including 'Undaunted Courage' (Stephen E. Ambrose), 'Astoria' (Peter Stark), 'Boone' (Robert Morgan) and 'Blood and Thunder' (Hampton Sides).
-The Missoulian
. . . well written . . . Recommended
-Choice
It is refreshing to come across a historical monograph written with such a clear commitment to the craft of storytelling... a narrative that transcends mere biography to reveal the complex and fractured world of the northern borderland during the turbulent years of the fur trade monopolies and U.S. expansion... this is a well-researched piece of scholarship that is also a true pleasure to read. Catton's aim here is not to argue small points of historiographic debate, but to offer a glimpse at the tumultuous nature of the fur trade "from its various colliding vantage points" through the compelling accounts of three individuals (p. 7). In this, he succeeds masterfully.
-John William Nelson, University of Notre Dame, Western Historical Quarterly
Catton's nuanced consideration of the cultural history of these events is enlightening.
-Thomas S. Abler, University of Waterloo, Journal of American History
This narrative focuses on three men from vastly different backgrounds and serves as a vehicle for exploring the rigors of the fur trade and the impending decline of Britain's fur-trading empire . . . Catton's writing style is lyrical and transcendent.
-Susan Sleeper-Smith, Michigan State University, American Historical Review
Thick description of the fascinating world of the Great Lakes and northern plains is the great strength of this book . . . Catton's tight focus on three protagonists lets him vividly illustrate the dynamics of fur trade society, the reorganization of the trade, and the rise of Anglo-American racism.
-Benjamin H. Johnson, Loyola University Chicago, Montana: the Magazine of Western History
Book Information
ISBN 9781421422923
Author Theodore Catton
Format Hardback
Page Count 424
Imprint Johns Hopkins University Press
Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
Weight(grams) 703g
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 32mm