April’s book club read was “This Tender Land” by William Kent Krueger. This is the second book our group has read by this author. The first was “Ordinary Grace.” Once again, the author transports us back in time to a world and time period filled with hardship but also enduring hope. The theme throughout “This Tender Land” is one of “We are not alone.”
Four orphans on a journey down the Gilead River in Minnesota during the Great Depression desperately in search of their true home, love and safety.
It is summer 1932 and Odie O’Bannon is a young orphan boy living with his older brother Albert at the Lincoln Indian Training School where they are the only white children among hundreds of Native American children. Odie refuses to give into a system filled with corruption and abuse of the children. When he gets into unimaginable trouble from which he and his brother must flee the school they take along with them a native American boy named Moses and a young orphan girl named Emmy.
This Tender Land is a story of the human spirit, friendship, adventure, history, hope, and forgiveness.
William Kent Krueger writes an engaging plot with characters that jump from the page into your heart.