Navigating the legacies of their Dakota ancestors, Rosalie Iron Wing grows up with her father in a cabin in the wood. His untimely death will change her destiny. Here is my book review The Seed Keeper by Diane Wilson.
Indian Schools
From 1880 until 1940 the United States government forced Native American children to live, work and study at Indian Schools. Taken from their families, these children suffered unimaginable verbal and physical abuse for years in these schools.
Rosalie Iron Wing never knew her mother, or her mother’s family. Nor does she know much about the era of Indian Schools. But her life and legacy have been hugely impacted by the atrocities that afflicted her family and ancestors.
Growing Up
After her father’s death Rosalie will be sent to a foster home. No one in the state knows she has family in a nearby town. Eventually she will meet a white farmer named John. He will suggest an arrangement to help her have a home and him to save his farm. They marry and have a child. But a white man married to a Native American women is difficult in the small town with a long memory. Eventually Rosalie begins to realize that giant farms and the fertilizers used are killing the earth…the very earth she was raised to always protect and cherish.
The Seed Keeper
After her husband dies Rosalie leaves the farm and returns to the cabin of her youth. She is sure why she needs to be there until she finds the seeds of her great grandmother. Rosalie will to return to the old way of life, plant the native seeds and protect the earth.
Voices of the Past
Wilson’s novel is told in the voices of four women, present day and past. These indelible women are remembering who they are, where they came from and why we can not forget what happened to the Native American.
****Four stars for The Seed Keeper by Diane Wilson
Thank you for reading my book review The Seed Keeper by Diane Wilson. We appreciate it when you pin, share and comment on our posts.
More great novels about the Native American experience; The Berry Pickers, The River We Remember, The Council of Dolls, Lightening Strikes.
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