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In the beginning, the Sawtooth Mountains were distant, forbidding and unexplored, except for the Indians who made summer visits to hunt and fish. Lewis and Clark gave the mysterious peaks a wide berth. Mines flourished, then disappeared. The area remained almost unknown to the outside world until well into the twentieth century. In 1936, W. Averell Harriman and the Union Pacific Railroad founded Sun Valley and turned Ketchum, Idaho and the surrounding area into one of the nation's top recreational areas. Dick d'Easum first glimpsed the Sawtooth Mountains when he was a boy. It was love at first…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In the beginning, the Sawtooth Mountains were distant, forbidding and unexplored, except for the Indians who made summer visits to hunt and fish. Lewis and Clark gave the mysterious peaks a wide berth. Mines flourished, then disappeared. The area remained almost unknown to the outside world until well into the twentieth century. In 1936, W. Averell Harriman and the Union Pacific Railroad founded Sun Valley and turned Ketchum, Idaho and the surrounding area into one of the nation's top recreational areas. Dick d'Easum first glimpsed the Sawtooth Mountains when he was a boy. It was love at first sight. He spent a life-time getting better acquainted with this remote wilderness. For more than a half century he collected stories of its people, its history and legends. Aften a distinguished career as a writer, editor and historian, d'Easum assembled his stories into Sawtooth Tales, the first book about this area sometimes called "The Alps of America." Sawtooth Tales is about mountain people and the events surrounding them, told in good humor and at times with tongue in cheek.
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Autorenporträt
Dick d'Easum was born in 1907 in Canada but moved to Idaho in 1910. A former reporter for the state's largest newspaper and later the Information Director for the Department of Fish and Game, d'Easum knew the state of Idaho like few others.