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3.5 

The Jump-Off Creek

By Molly Gloss
The Jump-Off Creek by Molly Gloss digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

A PEN/Faulkner Award Finalist • Winner of the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Award • Winner of the Oregon Book Award

"An instant classic. . . a truly beautiful piece of American storytelling." —William Kittredge, author of Owning It All

A widowed homesteader is determined to make a life in the unforgiving mountains of late 19th century Oregon in this “powerful novel of struggle and loss.” (Dallas Morning News)

Acclaimed author Molly Gloss drew on pioneer diaries and old family stories to write this modern Western classic of a solitary woman’s frontier life. In the 1890s, Lydia Bennett Sanderson, a hardship-honed widow, leaves her old life behind and journey’s to Jump-Off Creek to make her way as a homesteader in the backcountry of Oregon. Her neighbors are few and far between: Tim Whiteaker and Blue Odell are trying to make a go of it on their small hardscrabble ranch, while Evelyn Walker – a young, lonely wife – is rearing her children in daunting isolation. And a trio of rootless cowboys are squatting in the mountains, their only income the bounty from poisoned wolves. While Lydia toils into the summer, building fences, digging ditches, and repairing her homestead cabin, Tim and Blue engage in a deadly spoilers game with the wolvers. As the months pass, there is good and ill fortune, the exchange of fair-and-square favors, and Lydia finds both courage and community in her determination to survive.

An unforgettable tale in which “every gritty line of the story rings true” (Seattle Times), Gloss delivers an authentic and moving portrait of the American West.

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29 Reviews

3.5
“This was a very random book that I bought in a “blind date with a book”. I had never heard of it before but as soon as I read the synopsis I was intrigued. And I am so happy that it found me. This was like no other book I’ve read. It was so simple and yet filled out so much of what life, solitude, survival, and community is. Each of the characters had their own story but it was so beautiful to see how they interacted with one another and how their own histories influenced the interactions and emotions between them. So straightforward. Sometimes awkward. Just some people surviving and trying to communicate which is hard sometimes. There were bits when I questioned whether it was gonna be a 5 star for me but by the end, it’s really what the book left me feeling that made me commit to the highest rating. I feel thankful to read about people who, despite having to survive the extreme, both emotionally and physically, are willing to endure for the sake of a life that is their own. It is slow. And not a ton a ton happens. But that’s the way I like it. I’d also like to give an honorary mention of Rollin the mule and Rosy the goat. Animals in literature deserve more of our attention. It’s the way Samwise loves Bill the pony, that’s how it should be.”
““The Jump-Off Creek” is a fiction novel telling the focusing on Lydia Bennett Sanderson, a widowed woman who has moved to 1800s Oregon to homestead alone. The novel consists of thirty-six chapters and spans from April through December. The novel begins on April sixth with the purchase of a mule by an unnamed woman. After purchasing the mule, the woman begins to travel to her new home along the Jump-Off Creek only to discover that she is lost. The woman eventually comes upon a man and his dog, introduces herself to the man as Lydia Bennett Sanderson and learns that the man is named Tim Whiteaker that she is a long way from The Jump-Off Creek. After Tim provides Lydia with directions to get to her homestead plot, he plans to part company but then decides to guide her to her new home since he is taking cattle in that same direction. As the novel progresses, it is revealed that Lydia had never lived anywhere else besides her father’s house before her husband Lars moved into the house and then they were married. After Lars died, Lydia sold all of his belongings to head West to Oregon. Upon arriving at the Jump-Off Creek, Lydia discovers two young men squatting in the house. After a shared meal and getting assistance from the young men, they leave Lydia’s new home. The longer Lydia is in her new home, the more she encounters new experiences such as chasing away potential squatters to her home, killing rats, building a fence, and stopping of a bear attack near her home. Meanwhile, in an area away from Jump-Off Creek, three men are killing wolves for their pelts as well as killing cows while evading Tim and his friend and partner, an Indian named Blue. When the state decides to outlaw bounties on wolf pelts, Jack, Danny, and Harley are left broke and upset. While Danny decide leave to find a job, Harley chooses to stay behind with Jack. Soon Harley goes to war against Tim and they do battle by sacrificing each other’s horses. Although Blue is initially guarded about working with Lydia, he eventually becomes focused on the work of branding and roping cows and forget that she is there. Later in the novel, Lydia comes to Blue’s aid after he is attacked by a bear. In an effort to obtain more supplies for her home, Lydia travels to a nearby ranch and meets another woman, Evelyn Walker. Over toast and coffee, Lydia learns about Evelyn’s husband Mike and her two sons Junior and Charlie. Although Evelyn is excited to learn more about Lydia’s background and how she ended up homesteading alone, Lydia shares that her background is a boring one. The more Lydia speaks to Evelyn, the more the reader can see that Lydia was in a marriage of convenience, not love. After Tim and Blue provide themselves useful to Lydia, Tim gets job cooking, which provides Lydia with an opportunity to make money by selling him milk and cheese and having access to the post office to send and receive long awaited mail. As the seasons change, Lydia is surprised at feeling loneliness when Evelyn shares that she will be away from the area until Spring. As the months pass, Lydia settles in on her property and while attending a Fourth of July party, Lydia is introduced to other people from nearby communities surrounding Jump-Off Creek including cattle owner Carroll Oberfield, Jim Stallings, Otto Eckert, Herman Rooney, as well as Avery and Doris and McAnally. Later in the novel, Tim and Blue travel to town to sell bulls and during the trip, Tim realizes he’s gotten old and things he used to do such as getting drunk without eating and sleeping with a prostitute don’t bring him the same pleasure it previously did. Upon returning home, Tim and Blue discover that one of their dogs has gone missing and their other dog dying after being poisoned after eating bait left by Harley and Jack. During an ambush at Harley and Jack’s hideout, Blue is killed and Tim immediately gets revenge for Blue’s murder. After Blue is buried, Lydia distances herself from Tim before finally visiting him in December. Although Lydia worries about Tim, she takes comfort in the fact that he is not lonely due to the return of his missing dog. The novel ends with Evelyn giving birth to another baby, Tim explaining to Lydia how Jump-Off Creek got its name, and reminiscing about Blue. As I finished this novel, it was a bit confusing at times to keep up with the various characters. Considering that the novel was set in the 1800s in the wilderness, I was surprised by how kind the various men are to Lydia during her homestead journey. Although my cynical nature believed something bad would eventually happen to Lydia as a solo woman homesteader, I was relieved that I was wrong and that all of the male characters treated Lydia with respect and as a peer.”

About Molly Gloss

MOLLY GLOSS is the best-selling author The Hearts of Horses, The Jump-Off Creek, winner of both the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Award and the Oregon Book Award,  The Dazzle of Day, winner of  the PEN Center West Fiction Prize, and Wild Life, winner of the James Tiptree Jr. Award. 

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