Afbeelding auteur

George Keithley

Auteur van The Donner Party

10 Werken 65 Leden 2 Besprekingen

Over de Auteur

George Keithley's award-winning epic poem The Denner Party was a Book-of-the-Month Club selection and has been adapted as a play and an opera. Joyce Carol Oates has praised Keithley as possessing "Whitman's visionary imagination." He and his wife live in Chico, California

Werken van George Keithley

The Donner Party (1972) 41 exemplaren
Earth's Eye (1994) 4 exemplaren
Song in a strange land (1974) 2 exemplaren
Night's Body (2011) 2 exemplaren
To Bring Spring (Kestrel) (1987) 1 exemplaar
Scenes from childhood (1987) 1 exemplaar
Donner Party (1972) 1 exemplaar

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Geslacht
male
Nationaliteit
USA

Leden

Besprekingen

Ring of Fire is a novel unraveling familiy affairs set against the background of the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens. The protagonist Dick Darwin, an emergency relief specialist is in love with Linda Pell is a geologist. Her father, Doctor Pell kills police officer De Fevret. Though the book kicks off with a detailed description of a herd of deers fleeing from the mountains to rescue themselves from the volcano's imminent eruption, the multiple storylines soon become less easy to follow.
Sorting out characters require note taking amidst the main themes of swimming, horse riding, smoking joints and interaction with father Ted, the local priest in the San Francisco area. Seeking danger entering the St. Helens nature reserve or safety outside has parallels in the related families and agencies. Eventually the love story turns into a murder case, for which justice is sought. Quite an effort to read.… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
hjvanderklis | Sep 13, 2015 |
The Donner Party by George Keithley (1972)

In April 1846, George Donner and his family, his brother Jacob and his family and friend James Reed and his family set off from Springfield Illinois for California. By November of 1846, the Donner Party along other settlers they had joined were caught in an early snowstorm in the Sierra Nevada mountains. By the time the last surviving member of the 81 member party had been rescued, nearly half of the settlers, including all the adult Donners, had died from cold and hunger. Those that survived were saved by determined rescue parties from California led by James Reed and by their having resorted to cannibalism to avoid starvation.

Keithley's book-length poem is told in a series of monologues narrated by George Donner. The tale is told rather matter-of-factly, focusing mostly on the members of the expedition, the planning and the travelling. But even in the mundaneness, there is a lyrical edge to the description:

Morning the 21th of May,
riding over the river,
we left the States under the oily skies.

500 wagons travelled together
and in no particular order
thru miles of yellow meadow

where slim stems of goldenrod
glistened after the rain.
At dusk we drew up to a stream,

Reed cast from the bank and caught
catfish with whiskers like wire.
So we shovelled a fire

into several shallow holes
and fried the fish
on the red coals.

Most of the characters come across as thoroughly decent souls, especially Donner and his wife Tamsen, who set off with high hopes and much planning (though it was fatally misinformed). There is a villain or two, anger and frustration that lead to violence, some suspicion of emigrants, and distrust among the travellers and their Indian guides, but Keithley examines these issues with subtlety and little condemnation.

One of the delights of the poem is the playful relationship between George Donner and his wife Tamsen that flashes through occasionally. Even near the end of their ordeal after Donner has been badly wounded in an accident trying to repair a wagon, and both are on the edge of starvation, they tease each other:

She whispered,

"Look how my hips
hardly hold a skirt
in place anymore."

As I joined her
in the blanket
on the pine floor

she made a remark
about the slack skin
that flapped on my legs.

She liked to see
the way they shook
but I told her,

"If it's a matter
of their shape surely
yours look better"

She laughed lying
in my arms with
my hand at rest
on her small waist.

After looking at the facts of the expedition, well detailed on the website, "New Light on the Donner Party"
http://www.utahcrossroads.org/DonnerParty/
it is reassuring to know that Keithley has been true to the history. Obviously he imagines the characters of the participants and the details of some of the incidents, but this is a true visioning of a significant event in the American history of westward expansion.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
janeajones | Jun 6, 2009 |

Prijzen

Statistieken

Werken
10
Leden
65
Populariteit
#261,994
Waardering
½ 3.4
Besprekingen
2
ISBNs
11

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