
Author: Molly
Gloss | Title: The Jump-Off Creek | Genre:
Western | Publication Date: August 3, 2005 Number of Pages: 208
Geographical Setting: Oregon | Time Period: 1890s
Plot Summary:
Lydia Sanderson, a woman of few words and even fewer
means, invested in her independence by buying a farm near the Jump-Off Creek. After
making a cross-country journey, she finds her new land gone to seed. Not only must
she make something of the land by winter, but poachers have been stealing local
farm animals to bait and poison wolves. She is determined to survive on her own,
and quickly makes friends with her neighbors Tim Whiteaker and Blue Odell. Together,
the three settlers set out for battle against nature, poverty, and wolfers’
greed.
Characteristics
for Western:
Setting- This
story is set against a “dangerous but beautiful backdrop” filled with “treacherous
terrain” (Saricks 152). The opening chapters, which describe the end of Lydia’s
passage to the Jump-Off Creek, describe especially treacherous terrain. There
is also an “imprecision of time and place,” as the best way to determine where
or when this book is set is to read the dust jacket. However, it is set in the Western
United States (Oregon) between the Civil War and 1900 (1890s) (151). Since
everyone is so separated from civilization, it is easy to lose all sense of
time and place.
Characterization- Lydia combines
the primary “loner” protagonist with the secondary “good woman” who “works to
make a home in the wilderness” (152-3). She (as well as Tim and Blue) is stoic and
taciturn, tackling hard work and impossible living conditions without batting
an eye.
Storyline/
Theme- Saricks listed redemption and justice as common Western
storylines. Lydia could count as “damaged characters seeking escape, healing,
or redemption,” as she wants to begin her own life (no spoilers as to why) (153). This theme could also
be attributed to other characters, although the side characters are written
sparsely so it may require a stretch. Furthermore, Saricks lists “the difficulties
of living in a harsh landscape” as a major Western theme, which is at least 80%
of the book’s content (151). Justice also plays a mild role in the book, as the
wolfers are presented as a form of villain. However, this justice comes at a
price and is not played as strongly as in traditional Westerns.
Language/Style-
Most of the book is devoted to describing work, and everything is told in a “straightforward
fashion” (155). While the dialogue is not quite “monosyllabic” as Saricks
cites, it is very sparse (155). Both the characters and the overall prose is
very mater-of-fact, and Gloss does not shy away from gore, violence, or any
other forms of unpleasantness.
Read-alikes:
Nonfiction-
The Magnificent
Mountain Women- Janet Robertson
Pioneer
Women: The Lives of Women on the Frontier- Linda S. Peavy
Bad Land:
An American Romance- Jonathan Raban
Fiction-
Caroline-
Sarah Elizabeth Miller
One for
the Blackbird, One for the Crow- Olivia Hawker
The Trouble
with Patience- Maggie Brendan
These is
My Words- Maggie Snelling
Similar
Authors: Kent Haruf, Sandra Dallas, Kaye Gibbons
I am not usually a western fan and not sure I would read this one but some of the read alikes look interesting especially the non fiction
ReplyDeleteThis book sounds wonderful! Great job with your summary and the characteristics, I got a really good feel for the book. I also love the cover. Fantastic job and full points!
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