The Ballad of Lucy Whipple
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Chauncey Canfield: The Diary of a Forty-Niner. Turtle Point Press, 1992.
"Dame Shirley": The Shirley Letters from the California Mines. Knopf, 1965.
Joy Hakim: A History of Us, Book Five: Liberty for All? Oxford University Press, 1994.
Robert F. Heizer and Albert B. Elsasser: The Natural World of the California Indians. University of California Press, 1980.
Joseph Henry Jackson: Anybody's Gold: The History of California's Mining Towns. Chronicle, 1970.
Joann Levy: They Saw the Elephant: Women in the Califonia Gold Rush. Archon, 1990.
Remi Nadeau: Ghost Towns and Mining Camps of California. Crest, 1992.
Petra Press: A Multicultural Portrait of the Move West. Marshall Cavendish, 1994.
Sarah Royce: A Frontier Lady. University of Nebraska Press, 1932.
Lillian Schlissel: Women's Diaries of the Westward Journey. Schocken, 1992.
Elliott West: Growing Up with the Country: Childhood on the Far Western Frontier. University of New Mexico Press, 1989.
U.S. President James K. Polk claimed the California gold discoveries were "the find of the century." An early miner said gold meant "castles of marble ... thousands of slaves ... myriads of fair virgins contending with each other for my love." The Sioux holy man Black Elk called gold the yellow metal that makes the white man crazy. I think perhaps they were all correct.
Karen Cushman was born in Chicago, Illinois, and went west with her family when she was ten.
The Ballad of Lucy Whipple is Ms. Cushman's third book. Her first, Catherine, Called Birdy, was a Newbery Honor winner, and her second, The Midwife's Apprentice, was awarded the Newbery Medal.
Karen Cushman lives in Oakland, California, with her husband, Philip. They have a daughter, Leah.