One of the most literary annals of life in the North American West in
the 19th century, The Western Avernus (1887) recounts the treks and
toils of a Victorian gentleman abroad in a rough and dangerous land.
Singing with a frontier authenticity of hard work, rugged adventure, and
restless travel, the book has been likened to Conrad's Heart of
Darkness. But it is perhaps best known as a major inspiration for Robert
Service, the great Scottish poet of the Yukon, with its exhilarating
depictions of work on railroad crews and mountaineering in British
Columbia. This new edition brings to light a perspective on North
American history little encountered since the book's last printing 80
years ago. AUTHOR BIO: MORLEY ROBERTS (1857-1942), born into a
middle-class London family, traveled and worked as a laborer and
farmhand in Australia before journeying to the United States in 1884 to
begin the odyssey related in The Western Avernus. Among the many works
of fiction, essays, and travel books Roberts produced is The Mate of the
Vancouver (1892), considered to be the first notable novel of British
Columbia.