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In 1828 Abraham Lincoln took a flatboat from Indiana, down the Mississippi River to New Orleans. La Sueur takes that journey and makes it a crucible in Lincoln's life. The boy in this story is seventeen years old, chaffing at having to live in a crowded cabin, eager to find out what there is to learn in books and from talking to other men, and eager to get out into the word and make something of himself. This is also the Lincoln coming to terms with deep thoughts on the subject of slavery.
"The River Road" is told in a style that can only be characterized as poetic prose, which rings true even more than Sandberg's celebrated biography. The effect is a portrait of the raw Lincoln who has more in common with the trees he chops down with his ax than with the eloquent orator of Gettysburg. "Much of his history you know," La Sueur tells us, "but you can always as you grow have more knowing, see this great live oak of our history more clearly." I have read dozens of books about Lincoln, and he has never felt more real to me than he does in this compelling wilderness tale. "River Road" was originally published in 1954 and was reprinted by Holy Cow! Press with 1991 woodcuts by Susan Kiefer Hughes.
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The story is told as something of an argument between the narrator's grandmother and Dennis Hanks, Nancy's cousin. Dennis might have been blood kin, but when Abraham Lincoln was born he inspected the baby and announced he would never amount to much; consequently, anything he has to say on the matter of the life of Nancy Hanks is inherently suspect. It is the grandmother who has always been outraged by the fact that while tales area always told about famous men "no one sings of the women." The Lincolns are their kin are folk that the populist and worker groups Le Sueur wrote about in the 1930's could have understood.
This story is not as powerful as Le Sueur's "The River Road: A Story of Abraham Lincoln," but it is not intended to be. This is a "the strange song of the mother of Abraham Lincoln, the young, the deathless Nancy Hanks"; the other tale tells of the crucible of Lincoln's journey down the Mississippi on a raft to New Orleans. This volume in Le Sueur's Wilderness series was originally published in 1949 and has been reprinted by Holy Cow! Press with 1990 illustrations by Dina Redman. Final note: the photograph of Le Sueur by Judy Olausen on the back cover is one of the more impressive pictures of an author I have seen.
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