| A Review of: The Expedition by W.P. KinsellaWhat a pleasure it is to encounter a novel that has everything going
for it. The language is in Technicolor, the characters leap from
the page, the story is layered, suspenseful, heartbreaking, and
totally engaging. The protagonist is Johanna Reid, a photographer
in a dusty western town in 1858 who, for a variety of reasons, has
disguised herself as a man.
An expedition is taking shape, led by a Captain Masse. Its purpose
is to survey and chart a route to the Pacific Ocean. When the
expedition's photographer fails to show up, Reid is hired. The men
of the expedition consist of a lover of women, a lover of rivers,
and a lover of war, a guide and his Native wife, and a wild, mute
native boy who has been lost or abandoned by his tribe. The first
two never suspect Reid's subterfuge. However, Captain Masse, the
lover of war, who keeps an extensive journal, finds himself strangely
attracted to Reid, and eventually divines her secret, though he
never gets a chance to tell her, for the members of the expedition
are separated when their boats take different channels in a turbulent
river. The expedition is lost. Reid and the native woman, Water
Music, find sanctuary with a native tribe, much fascinated by Reid's
magical photography equipment, only a fraction of which she has
saved from the river. Alternately accepted and rejected as a magician
by the gentle, sheltering tribe, Reid finds out a great deal about
herself, and makes decisions concerning her future. This book has
the best cover and design of all first novels this year. Great
Plains Publications have three first novels all of which have
beautiful, eye-catching covers, and have been designed by people
who really care about their product.
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