.
.

Welcome

.
.
Make yourself at home. Put your feet up. Grab your favorite beverage and prepare to enjoy the reads.
.

.

Wednesday

Twenty Miles from a Match


Can you imagine living a hundred years ago? Can you imagine taking your six kids to live in the desert, build your own house and live off the land?
 
That's exactly what author, Sarah Olds, experienced. Aside from being a quick read, her biography, Twenty Miles from a Match, which reads like a story, really appealed to me because of the subject. Homesteading in Nevada was something my great uncle and his wife had done at the turn of the last century.

I always wondered what life was like for them. It's a biographical book but reads like a story. It's not filled with dry facts and dates, but a wonderful memoir, well written.

Sarah, didn't mention my family members by name, but there is no doubt in my mind that they knew each other, as the author mentions businesses and locations where my family were present within that small population. My Great Uncle ran the railroad station and my great Auntie was a telegrapher. So, I was fascinated to have this back yard glimpse to that era.

It's amazing to realize how medical care was handled back then, often with home grown remedies. I couldn't have imagined advanced medical care being available including surgery for a tumor. But, there it was. Her son was sent by train to San Francisco for surgery, and sent back to the homestead in the middle of nowhere so mother could treat his infected wound.

How did she succeed without the proper treatment methods we know today, without proper equipment, disinfectant antibiotics? You'll have to read the book.

5 comments:

  1. How interesting that you found a book that offers you a glimpse into how life might have been for your great uncle and aunt.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sounds interesting...I have often wondered what it would be like to live back then. My mom has an old photo album that belonged to my great grandpa. He was traveling from Colorado to California on a vacation trip, by covered wagon. On their way they discovered Mesa Verde National park...an Indian dwelling built into the side of a cliff. The pictures they took are amazing. The story that is told in the book about Mesa Verde is not accurate as the first people who discovered it were not given proper credit for it.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Wow, sounds really interesting! Love the picture too.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Linda, My son is the one who recommended it to me. Some kind of generational intuition perhaps. :)

    ReplyDelete

Blog comments are always welcome. I read, and enjoy, each of your comments. I will approve your comment as soon as possible.

If you don't have an account and don't want to sign up for one, you can still leave a comment. Enter your message and a name, even if it is Bunnykins.

You may use name and URL. Entering a URL is optional. If you have a site and you want to share it, this is a good opportunity to do so

Or you may use the Anonymous button.

Thanks for taking time to comment!