Paper pub. date
May 2018
ISBN 9780870719301 (paperback)
ISBN 9780870719318 (ebook)
6 x 9, 240 pages.

All Coyote's Children

a novel

Bette Lynch Husted
Summary

 

Jack and Annie Fallon had been living what seemed the ideal life with their son Riley, spending the school year in Portland, where Jack was a professor of Native American history, and summers at Jack’s family ranch in northeastern Oregon, on land surrounded by the Umatilla Indian Reservation. But a good way of life can disappear almost overnight, as the Umatilla, Cayuse, and Walla Walla peoples already know. Now the teenage Riley is in rehab, Jack has disappeared without a trace into the remote wilderness, and Annie is recovering from her own hospitalization following a mental health crisis.

Still fragile, a bereft Annie returns to the ranch, where she is befriended by Leona, a Umatilla-Cayuse neighbor. Leona, as it turns out, has a long connection to the family that even Jack never knew about. At the time of his disappearance, Jack had been grappling with his family’s legacy—with the conflicts and consequences of white settlement of native ground. Three generations before he was born, the family ranch was taken from the Umatilla reservation through the Allotment Act. Jack’s mother died when he was six, but his father’s stern presence still cast a shadow on the land.

“Survival is hard sometimes,” Leona says, but with her help, Annie is able to bring Riley home from rehab and begin the work of healing their small family, learning, season by season, how to go on living without Jack. Leona, Riley’s friends Alex and Mattie, and old neighbors Gus and Audrey become a larger family for Annie as they share the stories that connect them—long-silenced stories from both cultures that could solve the mystery of Jack’s disappearance.

In prose that is lyrical and clear-eyed, All Coyote’s Children weaves an unforgettable tale of cultures and families caught in the inescapable web of who they are and what they have inherited.


About the author

Bette Lynch Husted's stories, essays, and poems have appeared in numerous journals and anthologies, including Northern Lights, Northwest Review, and Fourth Genre. One of the essays in Above the Clearwater was selected as a Notable Essay in Best American Essays 2000, and another is included in the anthology, Best Essays Northwest. She has taught in high schools and community colleges in Oregon, Washington, and Montana, and now lives in Pendleton, Oregon. Above the Clearwater is her first book.


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