Weeds: A Farm Daughter's Lament

Weeds: A Farm Daughter's Lament

2013 • 335 pages

In Thomas Jefferson’s day, 90 percent of the population worked on family farms. Today, in a world dominated by agribusiness, less than 1 percent of Americans claim farm-related occupations. What was lost along the way is something that Evelyn I. Funda experienced firsthand when, in 2001, her parents sold the last parcel of the farm they had worked since they married in 1957. Against that landscape of loss, Funda explores her family’s three-generation farming experience in southern Idaho, where her Czech immigrant family spent their lives turning a patch of sagebrush into crop land. The story of Funda’s family unfolds within the larger context of our country’s rich immigrant history, western culture, and farming as a science and an art. Situated at the crossroads of American farming, Weeds: A Farm Daughter’s Lament offers a clear view of the nature, the cost, and the transformation of the American West. Part cultural history, part memoir, and part elegy, the book reminds us that in losing our attachment to the land we also lose some of our humanity and something at the very heart of our identity as a nation.


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Series

Featured Series

15 released books

American Lives

American Lives is a 15-book series with 15 released primary works first released in 2002 with contributions by Ted Kooser, Floyd Skloot, and Aaron Raz Link.

Local Wonders: Seasons in the Bohemian Alps
In the Shadow of Memory
What Becomes You
Between Panic and Desire
Searching for Tamsen Donner
Yellowstone Autumn: A Season of Discovery in a Wondrous Land
Island of Bones: Essays
Weeds: A Farm Daughter's Lament
Queen of the Fall : A Memoir of Girls and Goddesses
Pain Woman Takes Your Keys, and Other Essays from a Nervous System
When We Were Ghouls: A Memoir of Ghost Stories
The Twenty-Seventh Letter of the Alphabet

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