About This Book
The narrative follows a rural family's decades-long effort to tame an expansive prairie, tracing the elder patriarch's uneasy relation with farming and his son's inheritance of land and responsibility. It depicts seasonal hardships—blizzards, droughts, grasshopper plagues—and the practical, moral, and social labors needed to convert open prairie into productive homestead and community. Social ties, love, and civic service shape the second generation, while memories of conflict and military enlistment surface. Portraits of neighbors, local institutions, and shifting attitudes toward landkeeping underscore themes of continuity, sacrifice, and the transformation of wilderness into settled life.
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