Spanning the years 1853–1933—beginning with conveyance by oxcart and ending with air travel—this series of dramatic monologues tells the story of Helen Walsh and Thomas Hodgson, whose families trekked the trails of the great migration to the West. Helen and Thomas get married, and together, tame the remote corners of the wilderness by means of their imperishable love and a clear, well-beaten path.
In Praise of Jana Harris
“The voice of Jana Harris is unique in American poetry.” —Alicia Ostriker, poet and author of Stealing the Language
“Harris has a singular, compassionate clarity, tells a story the only way it’ll ever make sense, and knows where and who she is always. Her poems are all hers.” —Robert Creeley, Robert Frost Medal–winning poet
“Harris had combined the resources of the poet and the scholar into something new.” —Marge Percy, author of Gone to Soldiers