In April of 1846, Sarah Graves was twenty-one and in love with a
young man who played the violin. But she was torn. Her mother,
father, and eight siblings were about to disappear over the western
horizon forever, bound for California. Sarah could not bear to see
them go out of her life, and so days before the planned departure
she married the young man with the violin, and the two of them
threw their lot in with the rest of Sarah's family. On April 12,
they rolled out of the yard of their homestead in three ox-drawn
wagons.
Seven months later, after joining a party of emigrants led by
George Donner, Sarah and her family arrived at Truckee Lake in the
Sierra Nevada Mountains just as the first heavy snows of the season
closed the pass ahead of them. After a series of desperate attempts
to cross the mountains, the party improvised cabins and slaughtered
what remained of their emaciated livestock. By early December they
were beginning to starve.
Sarah's father, a Vermonter, was the only member of the party
familiar with snowshoes. Under his instruction, fifteen sets of
snowshoes were hastily constructed from oxbows and rawhide, and on
December 15, Sarah and fourteen other relatively young, healthy
people set out for California on foot, hoping to get relief for the
others. Over the next thirty-two days they endured almost
unfathomable hardships and horrors.
In this gripping narrative, Daniel James Brown takes the reader
along on every painful footstep of Sarah's journey. Along the way,
he weaves into the story revealing insights garnered from a variety
of modern scientific perspectives-psychology, physiology,
forensics, and archaeology-producing a tale that is not only
spell-binding but richly informative.
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