Following orders from President Thomas Jefferson, Captains Meriwether Lewis & William Clark set out from their wintering camp in Illinois in 1804 to search for a river passage to the Pacific Ocean. In this riveting account, editor Gary E. Moulton blends the narrative highlights of the Lewis & Clark journals so that the voices of the enlisted men & of Native peoples are heard alongside the words of the captains. All their triumphs & terrors are here-the thrill of seeing the vast herds of bison on the plains; the tensions & admiration in the first meetings with Indian peoples; Lewis`s rapture at the stunning beauty of the Great Falls; the fear the captains felt when a devastating illness befell their Shoshone interpreter, Sacagawea; the ordeal of crossing the Continental Divide; the kidnapping & rescuing of Lewis’s dog, Seaman; miserable days of cold & hunger; & Clark`s joy at seeing the Pacific. The cultural differences between the corps & Native Americans make for living drama that at times provokes laughter but more often is poignant &, at least once, tragic.