"A rare treat to find characters we can care about this much." — Philadelphia Inquirer
"As authentic as sand in one's shoes." — Edward Hoagland
"The book is a prism of loneliness in the form of a novel." — Los Angeles Times
"Drawing on pioneer diaries, journals and hand-me-down stories of her own ancestors, Gloss displays a deep awareness not only of the brutal hardships of frontier life, but also of the moral codes and emotional attachments of the people who settled there." — Publishers Weekly
"There is a gentle, touching overcast to this raw-knuckled pioneer story of a lone (but, she insists, not ""lonely"") hardship-honed widow homesteading in 1895 Oregon. . . . Gloss's conscientious McPhee-like detailing of hand-blistering homesteading toil is achingly effective; but it's the author's reading of lives locked in by hardship, loneliness, and real danger, and of their careful steps toward community, that is so appealing. A moving and engrossing first novel." — Kirkus Reviews
"A powerful novel of struggle and loss." — Dallas Morning News
"Every gritty line of the story rings true . . . extraordinarily fine writing." — Seattle Times