A starry-eyed girl and a gruff suffragette decipher the myth of a
dancer-turned-local-hero in this gorgeous novel from the author of
Katerina's Wish that Kirkus Reviews called "an engrossing, plausible
story of several unlikely feminist heroines with a touch of romance and
intrigue."
In her small Colorado town Pearl spends the summers helping her mother
run the family café and entertaining tourists with the legend of
Silverheels, a beautiful dancer who nursed miners through a smallpox
epidemic in 1861 and then mysteriously disappeared. According to lore,
the miners loved her so much they named their mountain after her.
Pearl believes the tale is true, but she is mocked by her neighbor,
Josie, a suffragette campaigning for women's right to vote. Josie says
that Silverheels was a crook, not a savior, and she challenges Pearl to
a bet: prove that Silverheels was the kindhearted angel of legend, or
help Josie pass out the suffragist pamphlets that Pearl thinks drive
away the tourists. Not to mention driving away handsome George Crawford.
As Pearl looks for the truth, darker forces are at work in her small
town. The United States's entry into World War I casts suspicion on
German immigrants, and also on anyone who criticizes the president
during wartime--including Josie. How do you choose what's right when it
could cost you everything you have?