|
Books > Sport & Leisure > Natural history, country life & pets > Dinosaurs & the prehistoric world
In 1872, a young graduate of Yale University named Thomas Russell
unearthed the bones of an 83,000,000-year-old dinosaur in western
Kansas. The rare fossil, an avian dinosaur with teeth and
flightless wings, proved that birds evolved from reptiles. More
than a century later, Russell's great-granddaughter set out to
retrace her ancestor's forgotten expedition. Part detective
history, part memoir, For Want of Wings is Jill Hunting's
captivating account of her journey into prehistory, national
history, and family history. In her quest to piece together
fragments of her family's past, Hunting ends up crisscrossing the
United States, from California to Connecticut. On her first trip
across the Colorado Rockies to the fossil bed site near Russell
Springs, Kansas, Hunting brings along her then twenty-six-year-old
daughter. When the book opens, mother and daughter are both at
crossroads, each seeking to understand the impact of personal
decisions on the landscape of her life. As Hunting ventures
forward, she encounters unexpected resources, such as ten-year-old
triplets who converse with her about dinosaurs and a Connecticut
museum where portraits of her ancestors hang on the walls. Through
lively descriptions of these visits, Hunting advances a view of
history as nonlinear and full of unlikely coincidences. For Want of
Wings is also the carefully researched story of the least known of
Yale's four expeditions into the American West, led by eminent
paleontologist O. C. Marsh; the friendship between Russell's father
and abolitionist John Brown; a portrait of a mother and daughter
evolving in self-understanding; and an inquiry into matters of race
in American history and the author's own family. In the end, all
these pieces converge, like fragments of a fossil, to form an
exquisitely patterned work of historical exploration.
|
|