An award-winning author investigates the entangled history of her Jewish ancestors' land in South Dakota and the Lakota, who were forced off that land by the United States government
Rebecca Clarren has been writing about the American West for more than twenty years. She is the winner of the 2021 Whiting Nonfiction Grant for her work on The Cost of Free Land. Her journalism, for which she has won the Hillman Prize, an Alicia Patterson Foundation Fellowship, and ten grants from the Fund for Investigative Journalism, has appeared in such publications as MotherJones, High Country News, The Nation, and Indian Country Today. Her debut novel, Kickdown (Sky Horse Press, 2018), was shortlisted for the PEN/Bellwether Prize.
'This heartfelt and well-researched work introduces us to
little-known historical realities. Perhaps even more important,
Rebecca Clarren explains and models how each of us can approach
dealing with uncomfortable truths about the past, and begin to move
forward towards healing wounds and wrongs left unaddressed for too
long' - Brett Shelton
'In this gripping book, Rebecca Clarren turns her unflinching gaze
on her Jewish ancestors who escaped persecution only to unwittingly
take part in a holocaust that, in the words of one Lakota man,
'lasted four hundred years.' In taking to heart the counsel of both
Indigenous elders and Jewish leaders to seek truth and make
redress, she creates a new model for engaged history' - Margaret
jacobs
'Meticulously researched and intricately woven, The Cost of Free
Land proves our personal stories inextricable from our collective
history. In her deft distinctions between mythmaking and truth
telling, ownership and belonging, absolution and real repair,
Rebecca Clarren has written a profound, important book' - Sierra
Crane Murdoch
'With compassion and guts, Rebecca Clarren illuminates a riveting
and important history, while contemplating what should be done
about past -and persisting - injustice' - David Wolman
'The flight of Rebecca Clarren's ancestors from Russia to South
Dakota entangled their rising prospects as immigrants with the
reduced possibilities of the Lakota. This surprising book reveals
the burdens the past creates and the rewards and obligations it
offers' - Richard White
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