Where the Wild Animals Is Plentiful: Diary of an Alabama Fur Trader's Daughter, 1912-1914 Review

Where the Wild Animals Is Plentiful: Diary of an Alabama Fur Trader's Daughter, 1912-1914
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Where the Wild Animals is Plentiful is worth a look if only because it offers a (sometimes frustratingly incomplete) window on the life of a young woman in rural Alabama some 90 years back. The diary contains some tantalizing hints at a life lived in frequent solitude and understood through a powerful but circumscribed sense of place and community. Unfortunately, it also seems to reflect well the monotony and repetitiousness of life in rural Alabama at that time. The occasional points of interest come packed between pages of very detailed accounts of May Jordan's fur-buying trips with her father, including frequent comments on soil quality, lists of furs they bought and descriptions of the routes they traveled. Which isn't to say that this sort of material doesn't have some value in understanding a life like May Jordan's, but it does keep the book from being a real page turner. Elisa Moore Baldwin has done a fine job editing the diary insofar as she has left the text alone except where the reader might have had problems with comprehension (most spelling and punctuation irregularities are preserved) and used the introduction to give a more than competent sense of May Jordan's particular historical context.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Where the Wild Animals Is Plentiful: Diary of an Alabama Fur Trader's Daughter, 1912-1914



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Where the Wild Animals Is Plentiful: Diary of an Alabama Fur Trader's Daughter, 1912-1914

0 comments:

Post a Comment