Richard
S. Wheeler died on February 24, 2019, at the age of 83. He was a brilliant
writer and a genuinely nice man. I was lucky enough to have corresponded with
him over the past decade. Our emails would come in flurries over short periods,
and then there would be silence for months and even years. I’ll miss his kind and generous words, his sly wit and
his presence.
Over the next several days I will repost a few of my writings about his work, starting with this review of his novel, Snowbound, written in 2015.
Over the next several days I will repost a few of my writings about his work, starting with this review of his novel, Snowbound, written in 2015.
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Richard S. Wheeler won a
Spur Award for Best Western Short Novel for his 2010 novel Snowbound. A well-earned and deserving honor. Snowbound is less Western and more historical. It chronicles John
C. Fremont’s ill-fated fourth expedition, which was ostensibly to find a
railroad route across the Rocky Mountains at the 38th Parallel
between St. Louis and San Francisco.
The expedition was
privately funded by a group of St. Louis businessmen—with the support of
Fremont’s senator father-in-law Thomas Benton—and while its claimed purpose was
to find a railroad route, its true purpose was to rehabilitate Fremont’s public
reputation after his court-martial, and ultimate resignation from the United
States Army. The route crossed the high and rugged spine of Colorado’s Rocky
Mountains, where a railroad passage was unlikely at best, and—to prove
something to his detractors—it was attempted in winter.
Snowbound
is effectively told in an alternating first person narrative. The narrative
perspective changes from chapter to chapter. It is told in the words of several
characters, including Fremont, and several of the expedition members—Dr.
Benjamin Kern, Alexis Godey, its lead scout Old Bill Williams, and others. It
reads much like a diary with minimal dialogue. It is told primarily with the
internal observations of the narrating characters. It is, through the horror of
the failed expedition, a character study of John Charles Fremont. Fremont is
presented as an enigma. He is narcissistic, admired—idolized,
really—complicated, and, in the end, loathed by some.
The novel’s brilliance is
its powerful description of the oppressive, brutal cold of the snowbound high
Rockies, and the hardship of the expedition—
“We
all looked pretty grim at times, with icicles dangling from our beards like
chimes and ice collecting in our eyebrows and a rime of frost around our
nostrils.”
“This
was a tumble and rocky land, with giant gray outcrops, steep slopes, somber
pine forests, groves of spidery cottonwoods and aspen, fierce, cruel creeks.
And snow lazily smothered the country. It had caught and settled in every
valley and dip, so that we were crossing spots that were ten or twenty feet
deep, perilously working upslope in a tamped-down trench that reached our
heads.”
“Somehow,
we made camp and got fires going in protected snow pits where the wind would
not snuff them. The snow had diminished, but the heavens scowled at us, and I
had the sense we were trespassers, invaders of a place that was sacred to
others, where no mortal should pass by.”
The story’s hero is
Alexis Godey, a former fur trapper and scout, who is Fremont’s second in
command. He is developed as a quiet, competent, and ethical man. Godey was
responsible for saving the bulk of the expedition’s men when he led the relief
party—after reaching Taos with Fremont and a few others—back into the Mountains
to rescue those stranded by hunger and cold. While Godey is leading the relief
party, Fremont recuperates in Taos and planning the next leg of the expedition
to California, and preemptively blaming the scout Old Bill Williams for the
disastrous expedition.
Snowbound
is a powerful novel of survival, and calamity. It is an introspective
interpretation of one of the most eccentric and dishonest topographical
expeditions of the Western United States. It is a beautifully rendered piece of
literature that captures the stark beauty of winter on the high ranges, and
both the hubris and nobility of men.
4 comments:
The book, as cited, definitely conveys the rigors of the journey but also captures its assonantal qualities as well.
Nuts. I had not heard Wheeler passed. I have only read 3-4 if his novels and all of them were top notch.
Richard's historical novels are engrossing. They bring the past and its characters to life with all its grit and grandeur. I haven't yet read Snowbound, but have just now added it to my list. Thanks, Ben.
I too have corresponded with him, but only just now found out about his passing through your blog. Such a pity. Such a kind man and one of my favourite writers. I hope he has found peace at his wife’s side. Thanks for remembering him Ben.
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