This is a fascinating, fun, and entertaining true story written 200 years ago by fur trappers taking on the hostile and dangerous frontier of the rocky mountains. I really enjoyed it! Also, the audio narrator does a fantastic job and made it all the more entertaining.
The prominent figure Isaac P. Rose chooses to leave behind the life of a city slicker to join a friend and others to face the harsh frontier to find fortune and adventure as hunters and fur trappers in the wild frontier whereupon he finds success. Together with other notables such as Kit Carson and Jim Bridger they battle and befriend native tribes, fight off wildlife such as grizzlies, and nearly perish under the elements.
I was met with a bit of shock at the very beginning of the book where it appeared that the author writes disparagingly of the Native American Indians. As the book progresses though, it's apparent that the author's contempt was not toward the natives in general but specifically the Blackfoot Indians with whom Rose's company battled frequently, and to a lesser degree the Shoshone. There is no denying the brutal tactics of the Blackfoot Indians during this time earning them the 'savage' moniker by their white counterparts who, in all fairness, often retaliated in kind. Many of the Native American tribes were their mortal enemies, and I think any normal person in such a time and situation would have felt the same kind of resentment and uttered the same kind of language.
More often than not, Rose and those in his company often befriended the Indians, formed alliances, assisted them, lived among them, and even married them. They often spoke in awe and amazement of the natives, particularly some of the women with whom they traveled and treated like royalty.
It is naive and foolish to judge the author and these men according to today's standards and political correctness, particularly since today we have a vastly different and more informed perspective on Native American people than people did at this time and place.
I read this on the heels of "Astoria" another book about fur trappers and explorers who ventured into the same area several years prior to Isaac Rose's group, but after the Lewis and Clark expedition.