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Traces

A Novel

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks

An early American adage proclaimed, "The frontier was heaven for men and dogs—hell for women and mules." Since the 1700s, when his name first appeared in print, Daniel Boone has been synonymous with America's westward expansion and life on the frontier. Traces is a retelling of Boone's saga through the eyes of his wife, Rebecca, and her two oldest daughters, Susannah and Jemima.

Daniel became a mythic figure during his lifetime, but his fame fueled backwoods gossip that bedeviled the Boone women throughout their lives—most notably the widespread suspicion that one of Rebecca's children was fathered by Daniel's younger brother. Traces explores the origins of these rumors, exposes the harsh realities of frontier life, and gives voice to the women whose vibrant lives have been reduced to little more than scattered footnotes within the historical record. Along the path of Daniel's restless wandering, the women were eyewitnesses to the clash of cultures between the settlers and the indigenous tribes who fought to retain control of their native lands, which made life on the frontier an ongoing struggle for survival.

Patricia Hudson gives voice to these women, all of whom were pioneers in their own right. The Boone women's joys and sorrows, as well as those of countless other forgotten women who braved the frontier, are invisibly woven into the fabric of America's early years and the story of this country's westward expansion.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 5, 2022
      Hudson’s nuanced debut turns the spotlight on Rebecca Boone, the wife of frontiersman and folk hero Daniel Boone, and, to a lesser extent, on her two oldest daughters, Susannah and Jemima. In 1760, Rebecca and her two young sons and two adopted nephews prepare to abandon their home in North Carolina under the imminent threat of attack by members of the Native American tribe whose land they’ve settled on. Hudson then follows the family’s story through Rebecca’s raising of eight more children and multiple relocations up until 1799, when the family moves to Missouri. Hudson ably tackles the historical controversies surrounding Rebecca, including the theory that Jemima was fathered by Daniel’s brother, and convincingly portrays the many hardships for women living on the frontier in this period, such as childbirth and the drudgery of maintaining a household while one’s husband is off on adventures. Hudson crafts a story of a strained but ultimately strong marriage, weaving in accounts of Jemima’s experience while held captive by Native Americans and of Susannah’s marriage to an abusive man, as well as of Rebecca’s gradual understanding of the ranging points of view held by the Black and Indigenous people she encounters along the way. Hudson succeeds at bringing to life a largely forgotten figure.

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  • English

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