Red Earth, White EarthWill Weaver casts the reader into the center of an interracial land dispute in this timeless novel. Having fled his family's farm at eighteen with a promise never to return, Guy Pehrsson is drawn back into his past when he receives his grandfather's ominous letter, "Trouble here. Come home when you can." He returns to discover a place both wholly familiar and barely recognizable and is cast into the center of an interracial land dispute with the exigencies of war. |
Contents
Section 1 | 3 |
Section 2 | 9 |
Section 3 | 16 |
Section 4 | 24 |
Section 5 | 33 |
Section 6 | 37 |
Section 7 | 40 |
Section 8 | 51 |
Section 23 | 190 |
Section 24 | 193 |
Section 25 | 202 |
Section 26 | 208 |
Section 27 | 214 |
Section 28 | 222 |
Section 29 | 230 |
Section 30 | 245 |
Section 9 | 54 |
Section 10 | 58 |
Section 11 | 64 |
Section 12 | 73 |
Section 13 | 87 |
Section 14 | 95 |
Section 15 | 112 |
Section 16 | 116 |
Section 17 | 123 |
Section 18 | 134 |
Section 19 | 145 |
Section 20 | 149 |
Section 21 | 157 |
Section 22 | 170 |
Section 31 | 256 |
Section 32 | 267 |
Section 33 | 268 |
Section 34 | 279 |
Section 35 | 295 |
Section 36 | 308 |
Section 37 | 319 |
Section 38 | 326 |
Section 39 | 332 |
Section 40 | 337 |
Section 41 | 349 |
Section 42 | 351 |
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Common terms and phrases
arms asked barn began beside blue brown building called Cassandra close combine crowd dark don't door drove eyes face farm father feet fell field Flatwater flax forward front glass gone green grinned ground Guy's hair half hand Hartmeir head held Helmer Indians inside lake land later laughed leaned letter light living looked Madeline Martin Mary Ann mean Mercedes mother mouth moved never night nodded once pickup potatoes pulled reservation road shouted side silent slowly smelled stared stay stepped stone stood stopped suddenly talked things thought told Tom's took town tractor trees truck turned voice waited walked watched White Earth Wicks window woman wood yard yellow Zhingwaak