Garibaldi Branch Library Book Club

Tuesday, July 16, 2024 - 2:00pm


Garibaldi Branch Library Book Club Meeting, top of flyer.

Join us at the Garibaldi Branch Library on Tuesday, July 16th at 2:00pm to discuss this month's book "Letters From Yellowstone" by Diane Smith

Read more about this month's book selection and find more books like it on NovelList. You must login with your library card if outside of the library.

A overhead shot in sepia of a  town in Wyoming

From Publishers Weekly:

In the spring of 1898, the Smithsonian Institution organized an expedition for botanical research in Wyoming's Yellowstone  Park. First-time novelist Smith, an environmental and science writer, follows amateur botanist A.E. Bartram's summer as the lone woman in that party of male professionals, telling her story through detailed letters  (and the occasional Western Union telegram). When Cornell student Bartram arrives in the camp, she receives a cool reception from  expedition leader H.G. Merriam, who expected "A.E." to be a man. As the botanists strive to get along and gather flora unique to the Rocky Mountain area, they encounter the U.S. Cavalry and Native Americans. Disturbed by Professor Merriam's inventive, sometimes nonscientific methods, Dr. Philip Aber of the Smithsonian visits the park to inspect and perhaps close down the project. The troubled Dr. Aber finally wanders off unguided into one of Yellowstone's  scalding thermal springs; his death adds to the party's web of tensions. As life in Yellowstone  changes her, Miss Bartram must deal with her stiff-necked Cornell mentor, Professor Lester King, whose "black-and-white" thinking she finally comes to reject. Miss Bartram lights up the novel with her admirable intelligence, wit and honest desire to learn from  everyone, but Smith wisely prevents her epistles from  overwhelming the other characters' voices. Instead, the collage of letters  and telegrams produces a Rashomon effect--the same actions are viewed from  many perspectives with no one narrator dominant. Serenely attentive, deliberately paced, as careful with psychology and history as it is with its botany, Smith's epistolary narrative makes a worthy addition to the expanding category of history-of-science novels. Author tour. (July) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.