In this haunting novel by celebrated Native American author Diane
Glancy, an unnamed man driving a lonely Minnesota highway hears the
voice of the land--but he can't make out what it has said. The man is a
professor who teaches a "Literature and the Environment" course, but he
soon realizes that there is much he must still learn about the land, his
past, and his home state. What follows is a kind of odyssey of
self-discovery. He submerges himself into the history of the region,
trying to piece together geology, Native folklore, and early explorer
literature, all in an effort to decipher what the land has said.
Along the way he experiences the deaths of his parents; he is stranded
in an ice-fishing house for a cold winter night; he helps rescue a
family from a flood of the Red River. He encounters more elusive
obstacles when he tries to gather his material into a book but becomes
hopelessly entangled in complexities, ambiguities, and contradictions.
But the more the man works to uncover universal truths, the more he
circles toward certain inescapable realities in his own life. This is a
small masterpiece of prose -- at once an enthralling narrative of one
man's personal quest and a deeply probing meditation on each person's
place in history.