16,99 €
inkl. MwSt.

Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
  • Broschiertes Buch

In the summer of 1928, at the age of 18, Pearl Rumble boarded a train in Iowa to spend the summer with her sister and niece on their Wyoming homestead. This is her story. "As they approached the hills, Pearl noticed how the landscape began to change. The trees and bushes on the hills that looked tiny from a distance slowly grew larger. The rounded hills looked remarkably alike. They were called hogbacks. Some imaginative person had noticed that they resembled a row of gigantic hogs lying head to tail. The red ridges along the summits of the hogbacks, where erosion had washed away the soil, now…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In the summer of 1928, at the age of 18, Pearl Rumble boarded a train in Iowa to spend the summer with her sister and niece on their Wyoming homestead. This is her story. "As they approached the hills, Pearl noticed how the landscape began to change. The trees and bushes on the hills that looked tiny from a distance slowly grew larger. The rounded hills looked remarkably alike. They were called hogbacks. Some imaginative person had noticed that they resembled a row of gigantic hogs lying head to tail. The red ridges along the summits of the hogbacks, where erosion had washed away the soil, now could be seen as composed of jumbles of broken boulders. "They reached the hills and had to follow a tortuous route through a canyon between two hogbacks. Red rocks with pine trees and bushes growing in their fissures were on both sides of them. When they got beyond what appeared from the plain to be a single row of rounded hills, there were hills and more hills, meadows and more meadows."
Autorenporträt
Pearl Rumble was born December 8th, 1910, in Mount Vernon, Iowa, the youngest of the eight children of Pearl Dodge Rumble and Clarence H. Rumble. The family moved to Cedar Rapids in 1917. Pearl graduated from Cornell College in 1933, Phi Beta Kappa, B.A., and taught high school in Illinois from 1935 to 1940. Pearl married Mark Mirich on June 19, 1937, in Golden, Colorado, and they had two daughters. When her husband died in 1948 she returned to teaching language arts and social studies in Cedar Rapids. She attended summer sessions at the University of Iowa, earning an M.A. in English in 1955. After her retirement she taught English as a second language from 1980 to 1985. On November 26, 2009, fifty weeks into her 99th year, Pearl Mirich passed away at home in Iowa City, Iowa.