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A Heart for Any Fate: Westward to Oregon, 1845 by Linda Crew
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A Heart for Any Fate: Westward to Oregon, 1845

by Linda Crew

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Oregon Historical Society Press (2006), Paperback

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Tags:washington reads, fiction, oregon trail, young adult

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Reviewed by Cat for TeensReadToo.com

Lovisa King was just seventeen in the spring of 1845 when three generations of her family loaded up the green, canvas-covered wagons to make the two-thousand-mile journey from Missouri to Oregon.

Born right in the middle of ten brothers and sisters, Lovisa begins their expedition with dauntless optimism and absolute certainty that her family's superior preparation will protect them from any hardships the Overland Trail may present. Even a last-minute reassignment to her sister Sarah and "bossy" brother-in-law Rowland Chambers' wagon can't diminish Lovisa's enthusiasm for the future that lies ahead.

But the road west is cruel and indiscriminate, leaving a trail of fallen party members in its wake. The entire wagon train faces days of unanswered thirst, weeks of trekking across the barren plains in blistering heat, and storms of prairie sand so acidic that the only remedy is axle grease rubbed into raw skin.

As death and disease ravage those she loves, with bone-deep weariness chipping away at Lovisa's soul, she begins to wonder if this expedition really has a terminus and when it does, how many Kings will be left standing when it ends.

I'm a huge history buff, especially anything pertaining to the Old West. The problem with a lot of us enamored of these tales, though, is a tendency to romanticize a time and place full of brutal and harsh realities. Linda Crew effortlessly sidesteps this trap to capture Lovisa's story as it might have been. Opening A HEART FOR ANY FATE is a general introduction to the U.S.'s great expansion, circumstances leading up to the citizen's migration, and life along the trail itself.

Lovisa and her family are the heart of this story; searching, like so many Americans at the time, for a more prosperous fate in a new land. Ms. Crew did such a wonderful job creating this young woman's voice, I had to continuously remind myself that I wasn't reading an actual account of her experience; although if the truth be told, I was moved to tears more than once during my reading.

A HEART FOR ANY FATE is a fascinating and moving depiction that immerses the reader into a defining period of American history and definitely shouldn't be missed. ( )
  GeniusJen | Oct 11, 2009 |
A Heart for Any Fate provides a fictional account of the King family's actual voyage on the Oregon Trail. Lovisa King is the 17 year old narrator. The story provides realistic and grueling details of what the voyage might have been like for them. This book will be interesting to readers young adult and older wanting to discover more about the pioneer days or Oregon history.
  teachbooks | Sep 23, 2007 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0875952992, Paperback)

This title is the winner of the 2004 Stevens Literary Prize. 'West. The sound of a wish in a single word.' That's how seventeen-year-old Lovisa King put it that spring of 1845 as she set off with her parents, eleven of her siblings, and their assorted spouses and children for Oregon Country, the promised land. From the opening lines, the reader is immersed in the excitement, challenges, exhaustion and elation, triumphs and tragedies of the journey, as an oft-told tale takes on a new freshness, seen through the eyes and the heart of this gritty young woman.Lovisa King is a flesh-and-blood teenager - feisty, funny, and wise beyond her years. With the crossing as catalyst, we watch her mature from a headstrong girl to a young woman beginning her adult life in the Kings Valley of western Oregon, a goal attained only through the harshest of sacrifices. The importance of this novel's historical terrain - the Oregon Trail - cannot be disputed. Neither can the importance of its human terrain - loss of innocence, alteration of long-held attitudes toward 'the other,' emerging concepts of love and family. Based on the life of a real Oregon pioneer, this is history delivered in a dramatic, personal, and gripping way.

(retrieved from Amazon Wed, 06 Jan 2010 05:12:40 -0500)

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