Regard for a Romance

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The Lady and the Mountain Man: 

Isabella Bird, Rocky Mountain Jim, and their Unlikely Friendship

 

 

“Thank you, Chris Enss, for this marvelous introduction to Isabella Bird, an English lady who refused to let unremitting pain keep her from exploring the American West. Isabella was a prolific writer whose reports on all she saw and experienced brought admirers from across the world to bask in the wonders of Colorado and the Rocky Mountains. Americans today will gain greater appreciation for our country, seeing it through this woman’s eyes even as she fell in love with a crusty, drink-riddled mountain man. Enss, a prolific and engaging writer in her own right, beautifully brings this woman to life.”

Two-time Western Writers of America Spur Award Winner, Carol Crigger

 

Praise for The Lady and the Mountain Man

Enter now to win a copy of

The Lady and the Mountain Man: 

Isabella Bird, Rocky Mountain Jim, and their Unlikely Friendship

 

The Lady and the Mountain Man Book Cover

 

“A touching, well-researched story of the love shared between a prolific author and Victorian lady in the Rocky Mountains and the renegade trapper who helped her realize her dream of climbing Longs Peak.”

New York Times Bestselling Author of Give My Heart to the Hawks, Win Blevins

 

“Thank you Chris Enss, for this marvelous introduction to Isabella Bird, an English lady who refused to let unremitting pain keep her from exploring the American West. Isabella was a prolific writer whose reports on all she saw and experienced brought admirers from across the world to bask in the wonders of Colorado and the Rocky Mountains. Americans today will gain greater appreciation for our country, seeing it through this woman’s eyes even as she fell in love with a crusty, drink-riddled mountain man. Enss, a prolific and engaging writer in her own right, beautifully brings this woman to life.”

Two-time Western Writers of America Spur Award Winner, Carol Crigger

 

“A delightful account of the peregrinations of Isabella Bird, footloose nineteenth-century English travel and inspirational writer. She documented journeys in Britain and the Pacific, finally ending in Colorado, where she befriended legendary Rocky Mountain Jim Nugent. Her wanderlust later took her to Asia and north Africa. If you don’t know Isabella Bird’s story, you’re in for a treat. A good read by Chris Enss, a perennial winner.”

Spur Award Finalist and Will Rogers Medallion Winner, Harlan Hague

 

Romance and Estes Park

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The Lady and the Mountain Man: 

Isabella Bird, Mountain Man Jim Nugent, and their Unlikely Friendship

 

 

To burn with desire and keep quiet about it is the greatest punishment we can bring on ourselves.  Isabella Bird loved an outlaw and only shared her feelings with her sister. 

Mountain Man Jim loved a lady and told everyone who would listen.  Read the true story of the unlikely friendship of Isabella Bird and Mountain Man Jim Nugent in The Lady and the Mountain Man.  

 

The Lady and the Mountain Man Book Cover

 

Romance in Estes Park

The Lady and the Mountain Man Book Cover

He’s more myself than I am. Whatever our souls are made of, his and mine are the same.” 

Read why Isabella Bird fell in love with a scoundrel like Mountain Man Jim Nugent. 

The Lady and the Mountain Man: 

Isabella Bird, Mountain Man Jim Nugent, and Their Unlikely Friendship is now available. 

Enter now to win a copy of the true story.

 

 

Reaching the Summit with Mountain Jim

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The Lady and the Mountain Man:

Isabella Bird, Mountain Jim Nugent, and Their Unlikely Friendship

 

 

Neither Isabella nor Jim was so drained they could not appreciate the incredible sweeping views.  Standing at the highest point in the park, they looked out over an unbroken expanse of pines and snow-slashed pinnacles and more.  “There, far below, links of diamonds showed where the Grand River takes its rise to the mysterious Colorado…,” Isabella wrote describing the sight.  “Nature, rioting in her grandest mood, exclaimed with voices of grandeur, solitude, sublimity, beauty, and infinity, ‘Lord, what is man, that Thou art mindful of him?’”

Isabella and Jim had reached the summit so late their time spent admiring the view was abbreviated.  The group needed to start back down the mountain before daylight faded.  Downer and Rogers were anxious to get underway, and Isabella thought for a moment they would suggest going it alone.  They had made a few comments about women being an encumbrance on such a journey.  “A woman’s incompetence on rough mountainous trips detains the others and can even endanger lives,” she overheard Rogers say.  Jim championed Isabella’s right to climb Longs Peak and assured the men that “if it were not to take the lady up, he would not have gone at all.”

Isabella noted in her memoirs the reason the young men on the venture were in a hurry to descend the mountain was that one of them was afraid long periods in the high altitude would lead to lung damage.  She noted that respiration at 15,000 feet was painful, and they were all struggling with getting enough to drink.  Before starting down the peak, each wrote their name and date on a piece of paper, placed it inside a tin, and tucked the tin snuggly in a crevice.

Descending the mountain was unnerving.  Isabella scooted to the edge of the peak, dangled her feet in front of her, and searched the cracks in the rock for a place to set her foot.  Jim had climbed down ahead of her, and, when she couldn’t find a crevice to use as a foothold, he allowed her to put her feet on his shoulders.  His strong arms lifted her from steep rock formations and gently placed her on secure ledges below.  Although Isabella was grateful for Jim’s help, she felt ashamed she required it.  She wanted him to see her as courageous and strong, not needy and dependent.  From what Rogers observed, Jim looked at Isabella with deep admiration and respect.  The glances the two exchanged as Jim held her in his arms carrying her from one narrow, icy ledge to another was proof the two had grown to care for one another.

 

The Lady and the Mountain Man Book Cover

 

To learn more about Isabella and Jim’s time in Estes Park read The Lady and the Mountain Man