"She loved the air after a hard rain, and the way a forest of dripping leaves fills itself with a sibilant percussion that empties your head of words."
Prodigal Summer
Barbara Kingsolver (2000)
Wednesday, April 15, 1pm
Prodigal Summer weaves together three stories of human love within a larger tapestry of lives inhabiting the forested mountains and struggling small farms of southern Appalachia. At the heart of these intertwined narratives is a den of coyotes that have recently migrated into the region. Deanna, a reclusive wildlife biologist, watches the forest from her outpost in an isolated mountain cabin where she is caught off-guard by a young hunter. On a farm several miles down the mountain, another web of lives unfolds as Lusa, a bookish city girl turned farmer’s wife, finds herself unexpectedly marooned in a strange place where she must declare or lose her attachment to the land. And a few more miles down the road, a pair of elderly, feuding neighbors tend their respective farms and wrangle about the complexities of a world neither of them expected.Over the course of one humid summer, as the urge to procreate overtakes a green and profligate countryside, these characters find connections to one another and to the flora and fauna with which they necessarily share a place. Their discoveries are embedded inside countless intimate lessons of biology, the realities of small farming, and the final, urgent truth that humans are only one part of life on earth.
**See content warnings at bottom of this post.
Resources:
A resource page from a NY library (I am not going to reinvent the wheel, this page is all you need)
**Content warnings: Adult/minor relationship, Animal cruelty and death, Bullying, Cancer, Cursing, Death of Spouse, Grief, Misogyny, Religious bigotry, Sexual Content, Transphobia