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Local author writes of wild in TEN THOUSAND ACRES
Clackamas County News, Jan.29, 2003 by Ali Ryan

1700's America: A time of nature unbound, wild and desperate to grow, populated with men and women aching to tame. Author Preston Gorbett of Moalla casts Ten Thousand Acres against the rich backdrop to weave a compelling snapshot of young America.

At center, Ten Thousand Acres is the story of Flora McAndrews, a Baltimore woman who sets out, along with her husband, for the 10,000 acres purchased in the unsettled land of Mexico-the region known today as Colorado.

When her husband dies midway through their journey, McAndrews makes the choice to continue:

"She had inherited some of her grandfather's tenacity and it was not in her to do something half-way. She left Baltimore fully aware of the difficulties she was going to have to face and happily agreed to accompany her husband. Common sense told her to turn around and return to the east as quickly as possible, her stubborn streak dared her to go on despite the danger."

Led by only an ill-drawn map, she struggled through the journey and arrives, livestovk in tow, on her ranch:

"She rode to the top of the rise; from there she could see all of the cattle and the other two horses...She sat on the horse and allowed him to eat as she sat in awe of her valley.'Her valley.' That had a nice sound to it."

Flora's story pauses for several chapters as Chester, a well educated slave of an Alabama plantation, is introduced. Gorbett traces Chester's life from its roots: his grandmother's arrival in Charleston on a slave ship.

Chester is a prized slave,for his physcial abilities and intellect. He forms a close friendship with the plantation owner's son, and is exposed to many advantages thusly. When the son dies in a tragic accident, Chester flees:

"He knelt down again and embraced Jefferson's head and apologized for the last time. As he released his head he said, 'I will miss you for the rest of my miserable life.' Then he stood up, turned west, and ran as fast as he could,"

The lives of Chester and Flora eventually intersect, and the pair joins first in friendship and eventually in a relationship.

Wealthy down-on-his-luck former plantation owner Henderson Applegate is introduced last, as he finances a ragtag group of "soldiers" to invade Texas. Looking for a way to become a landowner again, Applegate and his men make a disasterous foray into Texas. With the Spanish Army at their backs, the men retreat, and stumble upon Chester and Flora's home on their 10,000 acres.

Gorbett pulls his stories together with ease, variances in speech and tone marking the shifts from character to character. Historical details peppered throughout serve to round out the story and flesh the fictional lives into fuller reality. Each story develops fully, the individual histories displayed before their lives are joined in the novel's ultimately tragic finish.

 

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