Librería Samer Atenea
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Librería Kolima (Madrid)
Librería Proteo (Málaga)
An unvarnished ledger from the trapline: Journal Of A Trapper chronicles nine years in the Rocky Mountains, 1834-1843. He lived among the peaks. Osborne Russell’s journal reads as a mountain man memoir in the most literal sense - practical, immediate and unsentimental. Its entries map rivers, passes, camps and the routines of trapping and hunting life while sketching the commerce and characters of the fur trade; the result is both a working field record and a compelling strand of american frontier narrative. The journal’s episodic entries and plainspoken prose turn observational notes into absorbing narrative: simple route descriptions sit beside reflections on supplies, techniques and the skills needed to survive. Those drawn to rocky mountains exploration and wilderness survival stories will find day-to-day detail that rewards curiosity. Students of the early american west and readers fascinated by the decades after the Lewis and Clark era will appreciate the journal’s direct testimony, while outdoor adventure readers will enjoy its candid practicality.Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. Its historical significance is plain: a primary source for fur trade history and a candid snapshot of life in the decades after the Lewis and Clark era. Russell’s journal helps illuminate how the transcontinental trade routes and mountain camps functioned, and it supplies the granular, everyday detail that anchors broader narratives of the nineteenth century west. Casual readers find the immediacy and practical detail rewarding; collectors of classic frontier literature and curators assembling a history enthusiasts’ collection will appreciate this edition’s fidelity to the author’s voice. For outdoor adventure readers and those curious about the early American West, Journal Of A Trapper offers an unadorned, authoritative perspective on rocky mountains exploration and the trapping and hunting life that shaped a frontier now transformed.