An explorer and his nephew set out to beat Lewis & Clark to the Pacific in this humorous historical novel by the author of A Stranger in the Kingdom.
In the spring of 1804, Private True Teague Kinnesonâschoolmaster, inventor, playwright, and explorerâsets out with his nephew, Ticonderoga, to race Meriwether Lewis and William Clark to the Pacific. Along the way True and Ti encounter Daniel Boone and his six-foot-two spinster daughter, Flame Danielle; fight and trick a renegade army out to stop Lewis's expedition; invent baseball with the Nez Perce; hold a high-stakes rodeo with Sacagawea's Shoshone relatives; and outwit True's lifelong adversary, the Gentleman from Vermont, a.k.a. the Devil himself. And when a beautiful and mysterious Blackfoot girl named Yellow Sage Flower Who Tells Wise Stories enters the tale, things start to get really interesting . . .
A Top Ten Book Sense 76 Selection Praise for The True Account "A madcap what-if story . . . a c**k-eyed joyride through history." âWashington Post "Picaresque is too tame a word for this imagined romp . . . A great adventure." âLos Angelese Times Book Review "The funniest historical novel about the West since Little Big Man." âDenver Post "Mosher calls to mind the best of Mark Twainâmischievous, touching, and very funny." âCarl Hiaasen "Clever . . . . Fun and fanciful with much to savor, Mosher's novel demonstrates a boundless imagination and a light comic touch." âPublishers Weekly
An explorer and his nephew set out to beat Lewis & Clark to the Pacific in this humorous historical novel by the author of A Stranger in the Kingdom.
In the spring of 1804, Private True Teague Kinnesonâschoolmaster, inventor, playwright, and explorerâsets out with his nephew, Ticonderoga, to race Meriwether Lewis and William Clark to the Pacific. Along the way True and Ti encounter Daniel Boone and his six-foot-two spinster daughter, Flame Danielle; fight and trick a renegade army out to stop Lewis's expedition; invent baseball with the Nez Perce; hold a high-stakes rodeo with Sacagawea's Shoshone relatives; and outwit True's lifelong adversary, the Gentleman from Vermont, a.k.a. the Devil himself. And when a beautiful and mysterious Blackfoot girl named Yellow Sage Flower Who Tells Wise Stories enters the tale, things start to get really interesting . . .
A Top Ten Book Sense 76 Selection Praise for The True Account "A madcap what-if story . . . a c**k-eyed joyride through history." âWashington Post "Picaresque is too tame a word for this imagined romp . . . A great adventure." âLos Angelese Times Book Review "The funniest historical novel about the West since Little Big Man." âDenver Post "Mosher calls to mind the best of Mark Twainâmischievous, touching, and very funny." âCarl Hiaasen "Clever . . . . Fun and fanciful with much to savor, Mosher's novel demonstrates a boundless imagination and a light comic touch." âPublishers Weekly