It was simply a sandbar, an accretion, an accumulation, a meeting place
of ocean and river. It was a reaching out, an effort to cross barriers. It had a
different shape and a different location every year. - Sandspit II, page 29

Francesca Fryer offers a fascinating story of the historic Indian-White Encounter along California's Northcoast. Through years of quiet research, from 1965 to 1972, she weaves for all a passionate tale of the lower Klamath River, recording the voice and spirit of witnesses and participants, such as Yurok Robert Spott and Florence Shaughnessy, and non-Indian Harry Roberts.

Overall it is the sandspit, the ever-changing strip of land at the mouth of the Klamath River, the traditional meeting place during the annual migration of the salmon, which provides a physical and metaphorical focus for this supreme story of the human spirit.

Introduction
Author's Side - Bar
Book I Book II

Francesca Fryer June 16, 1921 - September 28, 2001
Click here for Memorial Statement by Guy Fryer

SANDSPIT III: PROLOGUE & CHAPTER 1

 
Copyright © Francesca Fryer Estate