A Thousand Moons: a novel

A Thousand Moons: a novel

Taschenbuch
5.01

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Beschreibung

A dazzling new novel about memory and identity set in Paris, Tennessee in the aftermath of the American Civil War from the Booker Prize shortlisted author Sebastian Barry.Winona Cole, an orphaned child of the Lakota Indians, finds herself growing up in an unconventional household on a farm in West Tennessee. Raised by her adoptive father John Cole and his brother-in-arms Thomas McNulty, this odd little family scrapes a living on Lige Magan’s farm with the help two freed slaves, the Bougereau siblings. They try to keep the brutal outside world at bay, along with their memories of the past. But Tennessee is a state still riven by the bitter legacy of the civil war and when first Winona and then Tennyson Bouguereau are violently attacked by forces unknown, Colonel Purton raises the Militia to quell the rebels and night-riders who are massing on the outskirts of town. Armed with a knife, Tennyson’s borrowed gun and the courage of her famous warrior mother Winona decides to take matters into her own hands and embarks on a quest for justice which will uncover the dark secrets of her past and finally reveal to her who she really is. Exquisitely written and thrumming with the irrepressible spirit of a young girl on the brink of adulthood, A Thousand Moons is a glorious story of love and redemption.
Haupt-Genre
N/A
Sub-Genre
N/A
Format
Taschenbuch
Seitenzahl
251
Preis
18.67 €

Beiträge

1
Alle
5

Ojinjintka (meaning Rose), or Winona, as that is her new given name, is an orphan of the Lakota Native Indigenous people. She is raised by John and Thomas, who fought together in the Civil War, though the book is set after the war is over. She works on the Tennessee farm alongside some former slaves. She's also educated and works and is loved by John and Thomas deeply. Tensions run high, especially after she experiences more trauma on top of the fact that she is an orphan, and that native Indigenous people and black people were seen as subhuman during these times. "Only when I spoke our language could they really see me." "It was the same day I started to shake too, just like that water. I shook for two weeks, and though I stopped shaking I could aver that something in me, deep within, was shaking a long time after." "Many said to me there was no one ever like her. In that was she was a story herself." "A human person finds a little medicine in another's sadness." "I wasn't cured of life then and maybe I am not now."

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