Ebook {Epub PDF} Bad Land: An American Romance by Jonathan Raban
Bad Land: An American Romance Jonathan Raban, Author Vintage Books USA $ (p) ISBN This account of the author's travels . Bad Land: An American Romance Vintage departures: Author: Jonathan Raban: Publisher: Pantheon Books, Original from: the University of Michigan: Digitized: : ISBN: , 4/5(8). 8 rows · · Drawn by shamelessly inventive brochures, countless homesteaders—many of them immigrants—went west Brand: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.
The best books of all time by Jonathan Raban. Bad Land: An American Romance by Jonathan Raban. Raban (Old Glory), an Englishman now settled in Seattle, has written a vivid and utterly idiosyncratic social history of the homesteading movement in eastern Montana that went boom and bust during - Publisher's Weekly. 2: British writer JONATHAN RABAN. His new book "Bad Land: An American Romance" (Pantheon) is a novel, based on memoirs, diaries, photographs and letters of immigrants who in the early s. Bad Land: An American Romance Jonathan Raban, Author Vintage Books USA $ (p) ISBN This account of the author's travels through homesteaded Montana won the NBCC nonfiction.
Bad Land: An American Romance by Jonathan Raban, an Englishman who now lives in Seattle, is an intriguing social history of the homesteading movement in eastern Montana in the early 20th century. Seduced by the government’s Enlarged Homestead Act of granting individuals acres of non-irrigable land, and lured by deceiving colorful brochures published by the railroad, future farmers and ranchers came to Montana to make their fortune, or at least to make a decent living. Bad Land: An American Romance is a travelogue of Jonathan Raban 's research, over a two-year period, into the settlement of southeastern Montana in the early 20th century. The focus of the book is on the least-populated and least-known area of the United States – the badland area between Marmarth, ND and Terry, MT along the route of the Milwaukee Road railroad and the goings on of various settler families who homesteaded in that area. Drawn by shamelessly inventive brochures, countless homesteaders—many of them immigrants—went west.
0コメント