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Lisa Wingate has a talent of making historical fiction
urgent authentic.
As she did in Before We
Were Yours, she champions heroic children who find themselves in situations not
of their own making, but always at their peril. In Shelterwood, those children
are orphans of the Choctaw Tribe in Oklahoma. Told from dual narratives, one
from 1909, in the voice of eleven-year Olive Augusta Peele, whose family has “adopted”
Choctaw sisters, and the other from 1990, from Valerie Boren-Odell, a young
National Park Service officer.
Because
of the way the resource rich land of Oklahoma was divided among tribe members,
the children were prime targets for the exploitation of early developers.
The later narrative focuses on the sacred
national park services and protection of the trees and natural condition of the
parks.
As she has done before, Wingate teaches her readers the obscure
facts that convince us to care about these children and characters and applaud
the people who worked to solve the problems. It is a fascinating book.
Shelterwood releases on June 4, 2024. Thanks to Ballantine
and NetGalley for providing this copy for review.
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