LAND LITERARY SERIES: American Harvest

Join us for another book discussion group!
All are welcome. I will send some discussion questions a week before we meet.

The mission of the Harmony Fields Land Literacy Series is to promote rural and land-based stories and build community around stewardship, literature, and place. Our book discussion group meets online four times per year.

When: Feb 13, 2025 07:00 PM – 9:00PM Pacific Time (US and Canada)

Register in advance for this meeting:
https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZUuceCvrz8qEtdObaMQaTppMey1ciXqCBL7

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

 

From Graywolf Press:

God, Country, and Farming in the Heartland
By Marie Mutsuki Mockett

For over one hundred years, the Mockett family has owned a seven-thousand-acre wheat farm in the panhandle of Nebraska, where Marie Mutsuki Mockett’s father was raised. Mockett, who grew up in bohemian Carmel, California, with her father and her Japanese mother, knew little about farming when she inherited this land. Her father had all but forsworn it.

In American Harvest, Mockett accompanies a group of evangelical Christian wheat harvesters through the heartland at the invitation of Eric Wolgemuth, the conservative farmer who has cut her family’s fields for decades. As Mockett follows Wolgemuth’s crew on the trail of ripening wheat from Texas to Idaho, they contemplate what Wolgemuth refers to as “the divide,” inadvertently peeling back layers of the American story to expose its contradictions and unhealed wounds. She joins the crew in the fields, attends church, and struggles to adapt to the rhythms of rural life, all the while continually reminded of her own status as a person who signals “not white,” but who people she encounters can’t quite categorize.

American Harvest is an extraordinary evocation of the land and a thoughtful exploration of ingrained beliefs, from evangelical skepticism of evolution to cosmopolitan assumptions about food production and farming. With exquisite lyricism and humanity, this astonishing book attempts to reconcile competing versions of our national story.