
An Endangered Species
Frances Washburn
(Author)Description
Tom Warder, born on the Pine Ridge Reservation, works at the LaCreek refuge, which hosts the nation's last remaining trumpeter swans. The refuge manager assigns Tom, who owns land adjacent to the refuge, to be the swans' day-to-day caretaker. Tom's land isn't productive enough to make a sole living from it, so he leases grazing rights to white rancher Bart Johnson.
Bart has fallen into debt and is unable to pay the lease he owes not only on Tom's land but also on land he leases from other Native landowners. As he sinks into debt his wife, Betty, becomes more extravagant and resistant to pleas for economy, while their son, Brian, becomes fascinated with hunting and begins stalking the trumpeter swans for the thrill of killing one. As his finances and his family fall apart, Bart takes to drinking. Meanwhile Tom's wife, Anna, and three daughters struggle to make ends meet, though their eldest daughter, Bit, who often assists her father in the care of the swans, is bright and determined to become something. Where Bit is the hope of her family, Brian is the disaster of his.
An Endangered Species is a tale of two families, each with their own strengths and weaknesses, bound to circumstances largely beyond their control, and struggling to survive on the upper Great Plains during the 1960s.
Product Details
Publisher | Bison Books |
Publish Date | July 01, 2024 |
Pages | 328 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781496238672 |
Dimensions | 8.5 X 5.5 X 0.7 inches | 0.9 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"Frances Washburn is a consummate storyteller. An Endangered Species, her newest book, is a poignant, tragic, and brilliant tale of two families, one Native and one white, trying to cope with changing times on the Northern Plains in the early 1960s. Washburn's forte is character development. The reader gets to know not only the time and place of the story, but also what makes her characters tick. The book is a masterwork of prose, rich in simile and active in voice. The story moves artfully to its final, surprising conclusion. It is indeed difficult to put down."--Tom Holm, author of Ira Hayes and The Osage Rose
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