Táto epická sága sleduje osudy niekoľkých prepojených rodín, ktorých životy sú pretkané intrigami, romantikou a tragédiou naprieč desaťročiami. Dej sa odohráva v búrlivých historických obdobiach, kde sa osobné voľby stretávajú s veľkými spoločenskými zmenami. Čitatelia sa môžu tešiť na komplexné charaktery, napínavé zvraty a hlboké zamyslenie nad dedičstvom a ľudskými vzťahmi. Je to rozprávanie o tom, ako minulosť formuje budúcnosť a aké zložité sú vzorce života.
The narrative centers around a peculiar incident involving Rabbit Stockings, who urges others not to hold the white women accountable for the unusual event. This highlights themes of misunderstanding and the complexities of human interactions. The story promises to explore the dynamics of race and gender within a unique context, inviting readers to reflect on the nature of blame and societal perceptions.
These novels face head-on the reality of the American Indian, perhaps the last great taboo in American culture. After all of the flag-waving, the wars to protect the Land of the Free, and interventions around the world in the name of democracy, how do Americans admit, even today, that America was not discovered by Columbus and not courageously cultivated by white Anglo-Saxons? The land was invaded and a people destroyed, all in the name of religion, political freedom, and money. Long before Cormac McCarthy and even long before Tom Robbins, William Eastlake invented an American Southwest whose comic and tragic dimensions, as well as its hard beauty, encapsulates American myths and nightmares in much the way that Faulkner did with his invented Yoknapatawpha County. Against a background of New Mexico that transcends regional space, Eastlake explores race, greed, and tradition, evoking stereotypes for the sake of exploding them and laying bare an American reality that is a strange mix of pop culture, zany humor, biting satire, and a deep-seated respect for and love of the land.