Frances Love Froidevaux (1942–2011) taught French and ESL and founded the Bartlesville, OK, school system’s first foreign language program. Barbara Love has worked as an archaeologist, ESL and English professor, and freelance editor.
Life on Muskrat Creek is a riveting account of the realities of life on an isolated ranch in the early years of the Twentieth Century, a must-read for all who wonder what life was like back in the good old days. * Story Circle Book Reviews * Life on Muskrat Creek is an immensely informative and yet riveting account of the incredible hardships experienced by John and Ethel Love while ranching in Wyoming between 1910 and 1925. Ethel's writing sparkles with description, and here forms an excellent contrast to the grim facts David and the editors recount. -- Linda M. Hasselstrom, author of <I>Gathering from the Grassland: A Plains Journal<I> Life on Muskrat Creek is well written and engaging, with dramatic, vivid, and often suspenseful stories. The material does much to enrich our understanding of ranching in early twentieth-century Wyoming, especially women's and children's experiences. -- Cathryn Halverson, University of Copenhagen, author of <I>Playing House in the American West: Western Women's Life Narratives, 1839-1987<I> The story of Ethel Waxham and John Love is one of the most poignant and memorable tales in the history of the West, where dreams and harsh realities have always collided. Life on Muskrat Creek is an important and unforgettable chronicle of hope and hardship in the real West. -- Dayton Duncan, Co-writer, <I>The West<I> (PBS)