Synopses & Reviews
In 1860 William Brewer, a young Yale-educated teacher of the natural sciences and a recent widower, eagerly accepted an offer from Josiah Whitney to assist in the first geological survey of the state of California. Brewer was not a geologist, but his training in agriculture and botany made him an invaluable member of the team. He traveled more than fourteen thousand miles in the four years he spent in California and spent much of his leisure time writing lively, detailed letters to his brother back East.
These warmly affectionate letters, presented here in their entirety, describe the new state in all its spectacular beauty and paint a vivid picture of California in the mid-nineteenth century. This fourth edition includes a new foreword by William Bright (1500 California Place Names) and a set of maps tracing Brewer's route.
Review
"What Brewer saw and did in California is described in glowing and enthusiastic language." Choice
Review
"His observations were shrewd and penetrating, pricked with allusion and sparkling with dry humor. Brewer preserved the finest account we have of California and its people a century ago." San Francisco Chronicle
Review
"[I]ntimate, vivid, and full of adventure and discoveries." Tom Stienstra, San Francisco Chronicle
Review
"By 1864 no one knew California better than Brewer. Contemporary readers can once again feel the thrill of being with him as he saw California for the first time and found a place truly commensurate with his capacity for wonder." Kevin Starr, State Librarian of California
Review
"[Brewer] reacted with much the same delight that tourists, from then down to the present, have felt when traveling the byroads and trails of the Pacific Slope. His jottings convey a sense of wonder evoked by magnificent scenery and the grand variety of land forms and vegetation." Choice
Synopsis
The journals of geologist William Brewer as he traveled in California in 1860-64.