Bound Like Grass: A Memoir from the Western High Plains
Bound Like Grass: A Memoir from the Western High Plains
Bound Like Grass is McLaughlin's account of her own -- and her family's -- struggle to survive on their isolated wheat and cattle farm. With acute observation, she explores her roots as a descendant of Swedish American grandparents who settled in Montana at the turn of the twentieth century with high ambitions, and of parents who barely managed to eke out a living on their own neighboring farm.
In unvarnished prose, McLaughlin reveals the costs of homesteading on such unforgiving land, including emotional impoverishment and a necessary thrift bordering on deprivation. Yet in this bleak world, poverty also inspired ingenuity. Ruth learned to self-administer a fashionable razor haircut, ignoring slashes to her hands; her brother taught himself to repair junk cars until at last he built one to carry him far away. Ruth also longs for a richer, brighter life, but when she finally departs, she finds herself an alien in a modern world of relative abundance. While leaving behind a life of hardship and hard luck, she remains bound -- like the long, intertwining roots of prairie grass -- to the land and to the memories that tie her to it.
Author: Ruth McLaughlin
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
Published: 09/24/2012
Pages: 200
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.60lbs
Size: 8.40h x 5.50w x 0.50d
ISBN: 9780806143262
About the Author
Garceau-Hagen, Dee: -
Dee Garceau-Hagen is the editor of Portraits of Women in the American West.
McLaughlin, Ruth: -Ruth McLaughlin lives in Great Falls, Montana, where she teaches literacy and writing. Her stories and essays have appeared in magazines and anthologies, including Best American Short Stories.