Kirkus Reviews QR Code
EARTH KEEPER by N. Scott Momaday

EARTH KEEPER

Reflections on the American Land

by N. Scott Momaday

Pub Date: Nov. 3rd, 2020
ISBN: 978-0-06-300933-2
Publisher: Harper/HarperCollins

A plea for the planet from the Pulitzer Prize–winning novelist, poet, and playwright.

Born and raised as a member of the Kiowa tribe, Momaday (b. 1934) has had a remarkably distinguished career, earning a National Medal of Arts and a lifetime achievement award from the Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards, among other honors. Here, the author follows the dictum of one of his own teachers: “Write little and write well.” Momaday distills age-old wisdom from the elders who came before him into a concise book featuring chapters no more than a paragraph in length. He evokes a world of natural connection, one that existed long before him and is now threatened, and he draws inspiration from Dragonfly, “a holy man” devoted to “a spiritual life of the mind.” Throughout the book, Momaday maintains a tension between the eternal spirit of the Earth, with the “Great Mystery” pervading it, and the threats posed by those infected with “the immorality of ignorance and greed, the disease of indifference to the earth.” While he notes the importance of studying history, he also argues that “it is the present and the possibilities of a future that must concern us. Ours is a damaged world. We humans have done the damage, and we must be held to account. We have suffered a poverty of the imagination, a loss of innocence. I would strive with all my strength to give [a] sense of wonder to those who will come after me.” Wonder abounds in these pages, and the author also touches on the passage of time and the many costs of supposed progress. Though brief, the book serves as a tight summation of many of the themes that Momaday has developed during his long career, and his fans will relish it.

Short chapters of prose that read almost like prayers to the natural world.