Table of Contents
"Engaging... [A] Harrowing Adventure...
This picaresque tale presents a series of remarkable characters, particularly in the inexperienced narrator, whose graphic descriptions of travel and domestic life before the Civil War strip away romantic notions of simpler times.... Smiley has created an authentic voice in this struggle of a young woman to live simply amid a swirl of deadly antagonism."
The Christian Science Monitor
"A fine historical novel that describes a fascinating time and place ... It is both funny and subtle, rich in ideas ... Smiley has created a better all-around piece of fiction than any of her previous work, including the Pulitzer Prize-winning A Thousand Acres."
The Wall Street Journal
"Smiley is a writer of rare versatility who travels widely in her creative endeavors. She proved her mastery of both short fiction and the novel with three sterling works (The Age of Grief, Ordinary Love and Good Will, and A Thousand Acres); her fondness for history had already been established with The Greelanders. In 1995, she successfully extended her repertoire to comedy with the hilarious academic satire Moo. What her new novel shares with all these works is its authorial intelligence."
The Boston Sunday Globe
"Jane Smiley is nothing if not protean, a literary ventriloquist of incredible range.... This is a novel that manages to combine the evocative storytellers voice with the moviemakers sense of drama and visuals, an old-fashioned tale told with contemporary steam and panache."
The Philadelphia Inquirer
"Not only is this a rollicking feminist tale of a woman who can handle herself in the thick of the Kansas Wars, The All-True Travels and Adventures of Lidie Newton is also a coming of age story as well as a lasting portrait of the genuinely tumultuous time just before the Civil War."
The Raleigh News & Observer
"A tale of love and war, revenge and betrayal, Smileys fictional memoir invites comparisons with Gone with the Wind, even War and Peace.... Lidie Newton has the ring of honesty and truth. It also carries the stamp of its authors historical sense, stylistic verve, and moral passion."
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
"Full of the same arresting authenticity of detail that carried A Thousand Acres."
New York Daily News
"Lidie Is an Unforgettable Character....The All-True Travels is a showcase for Smileys range and dexterity, dead-on in its emotional impact and resonant in the painful truths it conveys."
San Diego Union-Tribune
"Rendered in sharply lucid prose and filled with wonderful period detail ... Lidies story reads like a long and various dream, brightly colored and brilliantly observeda journey into a world as troubled, ambiguous, and full of life as our own."
Chicago Tribune
"An adventure story, full of suspense, near-misses, and coincidence ... The first and sustaining marvel of [Smileys] new novel is Lydia Newtons voice: grounded in 19th-century reserve, yet honest, self-aware, and curious.
Toronto Globe & Mail
"Smiley nabbed a Pulitzer for A Thousand Acres. This stunning new effort should win equally thunderous acclaim."
Mademoiselle
"An immensely appealing heroine, a historical setting conveyed with impressive fidelity and a charming and poignant love story make Smileys new novel a sure candidate for bestseller longevity.... Propelled by Lidies spirited voice, this narrative is packed with drama, irony, historical incident, moral ambiguities, and the perception of human frailty.... This novel performs all the functions of superior fiction: in reading one womans moving story, we understand an historical epoch, the social and political conditions that produced it, and the psychological, moral, and economic motivations of the people who incited and endured its violent confrontations."
Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Gloriously detailed and brilliantly told, this is a hugely entertaining, illuminating, and sagacious vision of a time of profound moral and political conflict, and of one womans coming to terms with the perilous, maddening, and precious world."
Booklist (starred review)
"Smiley scales another peak with this bighearted and thoughtful picaresque novel.... [A] richly entertaining saga of a woman who might have been well matched with Thomas Bergers Little Big Man, and whom Huck Finn would have been proud to claim as his big sister."
Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
"Her Finest Work Yet ...Resembling a cross between the writing of Jane Austen, Stephen Crane, and Mark Twain ... A fast-paced historical ride through a defining moment in our nations history as seen through the eyes of a remarkable woman.... Smileys biggest triumph is in the character of Lidie. One can actually see her growth throughout the story as Lidie learns about the ambiguity of human moralityand that true justice is rarely served."
San Antonio Express-News
"Highly recommended ... Trust Smiley to take a situation charged with both social significance and novelistic opportunity and ride it for all its worth.... Smiley gives us a rich lode of historical detail yet keep the story moving, so that it seems to flow by like a river while at the same time yielding up its riches in leisurely fashion."
Library Journal (starred review)
"Like Cold Mountain and Belovedand with more than a casual nod to Mark Twainthis sprawling saga by the Pulitzer-winning author of A Thousand Acres connects readers to the historical issues of the time."
Glamour
"Our heroine is a horse-riding, river-swimming, plain-faced young woman with a distinctly well-calibrated mind of her own."
The Baltimore Sun
"A long, wild adventure ... Lidie never loses her pluck, and her story becomes both a rich homage to Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and a thrilling variation on the derring-do of Lonesome Dove."
Outside magazine
"[A] gripping, epic new novel ... The All-True Travels is consistently absorbing, thanks in large part to the strong, vibrant voice of the unforgettable Lidie Newton."
Good Housekeeping "Packed with action in a setting worthy of a Western shoot-em-up."
Newark Star-Ledger
Acknowledgments
THE AUTHOR WOULD LIKE to thank Professor David Dary of the University of Oklahoma and Professor Theodore Nostwich of Iowa State University for their invaluable assistance with this project. Whatever mistakes have slipped into the text have done so in spite of Professor Dary and Professor Nostwichs best efforts, and are entirely the responsibility of the author.
BOOK ONE
CHAPTER I
I Eavesdrop, and Hear III of Myself
Let every woman, then, bear in mind, that, just so long as her dress and position oppose any resistance to the motion of her chest, in just such proportion her blood is unpurified, and her vital organs are debilitated.
MISS CATHERINE E. BEECHER, A Treatise on Domestic Economy, for the Use of Young Ladies at Home, p. 117
I HAVE MADE UP my mind to begin my account upon the first occasion when I truly knew where things stood with me, that is, that afternoon of the day my father, Arthur Harkness, was taken to the Quincy graveyard and buried between my mother, Cora Mary Harkness, and his first wife, Ella Harkness. My fathers death was not unexpected, and perhaps not even unwelcome, for he was eighty-two years old and had for some years been lost in a second childhood.
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