Across the Seasons
by
Book Details
About the Book
Sarah Hanley and Osborne Russell live in different centuries, but their lives are connected in time. Russell began his journal (Journal of a Trapper) in 1834 when he joined Nathaniel Wyeth's second expedition of trappers to the wild regions of the Rocky Mountains. Sarah Hanley was given a copy of Russell's journal in 1984.
Sarah writes:
In my mind's eye I could see Russell, poised and frozen in time. He was sitting on his horse early in the morning, when the clouds lie down around the shoulders of the great mountains, and the air smells as if God has just created the earth. There, quiet and still, I could see him listening to the symphony of the wilderness and dreaming of the trail he was destined to carve across the mountains.
When Sarah trades for a mythical blanket that will take a horse and its rider across the seasons, she travels back in time and meets Russell on his way to the Rendezvous of 1838 on the Wind River.
Although there are no known photographs of Russell, in her first novel, Glise paints a vivid portrait of Russell and other legendary mountain men estranged from the comforts and privileges of civilization. Across the Seasons is a timeless love story. In the tradition of the finest historical fiction, Glise has written an adventurous tale that is guaranteed to please lovers of western history.
What Dr. Fred R. Gowans and Lyn Clayton of Brigham Young University are saying . . .
"The grandeur of the central and northern Rocky Mountains of the American west is the setting for the hisorical novel, Across the Seasons.
Laura Rugel Glise's dynamic twist of the wilderness career of legendary 19th century mountain man, Osborne Russell, is guaranteed to keep the reader in suspense and be overwhelmed by the startling conclusion. The previous concept of most readers, pertaining to the life and times of Osborne Russell, will be greatly altered by this unique work."
About the Author
"If you want to change the course of your life," says Glise, "begin writing a novel." When she began researching her first novel, Across the Seasons, five years ago, it took her on an amazing journey.
On a somewhat autobiographical note, which Glise uses in her novel, she was given Osborne Russell's Journal of a Trapper years ago. "As I moved over the years I would always come across Russell's Journal and face the question, keep it or discard? I could never let it go."
Her fascination with Russell and other men of the Rocky Mountain fur trade led her to new friendships as she conducted the extensive research essential to historical fiction. "The more I learned, the more overwhelmed I became by what I didn't know. At one point I had an almost paralyzing fear that I was going to make an honest mistake but, nonetheless, a mistake and I would make a fool of myself. I have met extraordinary individuals over the last few years. They generously shared their knowledge and enthusiasm for this incredible time in our nation's history."
Her desire for accuracy took her to the original 1838 Rendezvous site near present-day Riverton, Wyoming. "When I showed up that first summer, I am sure the organizers thought I was more qualified to write hysterical fiction. I was a real greenhorn, as Osborne Russell would have referred to me. The 1838 Rendezvous Association has welcomed me with genuine hospitality over the years. I am looking forward to returning in July to participate in the annual reenactment and sign copies of my novel."
Glise was born and raised in Texas and moved to Tennessee where she earned a B.F.A. in painting, printmaking and sculpture from the University of Memphis. She met and married her husband at MSU and moved to Newnan, Georgia in 1981. Glise earned a M.Ed. in media education from the State University of West Georgia in 1992. She has worked as a media specialist for six years. After she finished her novel in 1999, she and her family moved to Washington. She presently lives in Olympia, Washington with her husband and daughter.
Glise is a member of the American Association of University Women, the American Library Association, Washington Education Association, National Education Association, the Washington Library Media Association, and Women Writing the West. She is also an associate member of the Western Writers of America.
She is currently writing a non-fiction book for young adults on the Rocky Mountain fur trade which includes the biographies of ten trappers.