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Bitterroot: The Life and Death of Meriwether Lewis cover art

Bitterroot: The Life and Death of Meriwether Lewis

By: Patricia Tyson Stroud
Narrated by: Mark Caldwell Walker
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Publisher's Summary

In America's early national period, Meriwether Lewis was a towering figure. Selected by Thomas Jefferson to lead the expedition to explore the Louisiana Purchase, he was later rewarded by Jefferson with the governorship of the entire Louisiana Territory. Yet within three years, plagued by controversy over administrative expenses, Lewis found his reputation and career in tatters. En route to Washington to clear his name, he died mysteriously in a crude cabin on the Natchez Trace in Tennessee. Was it a suicide, felled by his own alcoholism and mental instability? Most historians have agreed. Patricia Tyson Stroud examines the evidence to posit another, even darker, ending for Lewis.

Stroud uses Lewis's find, the bitterroot flower, with its nauseously pungent root, as a symbol for his reputation as a purported suicide. It was this reputation that Thomas Jefferson promulgated in the memoir he wrote prefacing the short account of Lewis's historic expedition published five years after his death. Without investigation of any kind, Jefferson, Lewis's mentor from boyhood, reiterated undocumented assertions of Lewis's serious depression and alcoholism.

Through a retelling of his life, from his resourceful youth to the brilliance of his leadership and accomplishments as a man, Bitterroot shows that Jefferson's mystifying assertion about the death of his protégé is the long-held bitter root of the Meriwether Lewis story.

The book is published by University of Pennsylvania Press.

©2018 University of Pennsylvania Press (P)2018 Redwood Audiobooks

Critic Reviews

"A refreshing and overdue new perspective on the complicated and often contradictory life of Meriwether Lewis." (Landon Jones, author of William Clark and the Shaping of the West)

"A learned account of the heroic and tragic life of Meriwether Lewis set in the historical context of early America." (Alfred E. Schuyler, the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University) 

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