Book cover of Prodigal Summer

Book description

It is summer in the Appalachian mountains and love, desire and attraction are in the air. Nature, too, it seems, is not immune. From her outpost in an isolated mountain cabin, Deanna Wolfe, a reclusive wildlife biologist, watches a den of coyotes that have recently migrated into the region. She…

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Why read it?

10 authors picked Prodigal Summer as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?

Divine, divine, divine! This novel taught me so much about the landscape in Appalachia. The female characters were rich and deep. Running throughout the story was the thread of women standing for farming systems that partner with nature versus male characters who want to dominate or decimate.

It was musical and mystical, and I just adored being transported to the cabin in the woods and the rich gardens of the women who knew how Mama Earth rolls. There was also a wonderful exploration of female desire. It was lush and leafy, and I’m so grateful to Barbara for writing this…

From Rachael's list on Earth lovers and rural regeneration.

I direct an MFA in Nature Writing, and something by Barbara Kingsolver is always on my syllabus. This gorgeous novel is perhaps my longest-standing favorite, though. It takes place in Appalachia and is full of that area's natural history.

On top of that, the main character is a wildlife biologist—so there’s plenty to learn from her! There’s an exciting plot, and lots of love stories (I do like a good love story), but what I love most is the underlying ethic of good living on planet Earth. 

From Laura's list on delightful books about Mama Earth.

This is my favorite of Kingsolver’s books. I fell in love with so many of the characters, even some of the crustier sort. I also fell in love with the Appalachian mountains and valleys where they worked, studied, and sometimes struggled.

This is a poignant book about families and landscapes, and how we must find our own place in each.

If you love Prodigal Summer...

Book cover of Shearwater Storm

Shearwater Storm by Arthur Winer,

Charlotte Rose’s quiet life on a remote island is forever changed the day Michael Cordero, injured and bleeding, steers his ketch, Shearwater, into her cove. Charlotte tends to Michael’s wounds, using the skills she’s learned caring for her husband and son, who are away fishing for salmon. As Michael recovers,…

I love this book because it evokes the rich tapestry of the land I grew up in and the people I grew up around, capturing in typical Kingsolver fashion those liminal edges between feral and tame, local and outsider, privileged and not so privileged.

Set in the Southern Appalachians, it tracks three characters’ lives over the course of a single, fecund summer. Science plays a big role, but so does faith, as the characters come to terms with gospels of their own making. As Kingsolver writes, “Every choice is a world made new for the chosen.”

From Culley's list on books in which nature is a teacher.

Prodigal Summer is a poignant novel that interweaves three unforgettable stories of humans’ interdependency with nature.

A wildlife biologist and land steward excitedly sites coyotes on her forested turf; two neighbors feuding over the use of herbicides; and a former “bug expert” turned widowed farmer’s wife. I admire how these fictious tales offer keen-eyed examples of how stories centered around nature can be braided into everyday fiction.

Set in Appalachia, this novel also celebrates an underappreciated corner of our country (too many books are set in New York, in my opinion). As a novelist, Barbara Kingsolver’s books are among my…

I could not put together a list such as this without including a work by Kingsolver, whom I so associate with writing that embraces the natural environment.

When I first shared my own writing, readers would ask me if I knew her work. I have a somewhat sparse style; Kingsolver, on the other hand, uses rich detail of natural phenomenon to great effect, making her novel lush. She also makes accessible simple to complex biological concepts.

In this novel, by juxtaposing biology and lush detail with the stories of the three main characters, she draws parallels between the “natural world”…

If you love Barbara Kingsolver...

Book cover of The Drum Tree

The Drum Tree by Catherine V. Wolf,

The Drum Tree explores an Earth equivalent world at the cusp of ecological and economic uncertainty through the discoveries and explorations of four exceptional teens and their families.

In this book, you will meet Delan—a drummer and forest wanderer, Hali—a dancer and free spirit, and Jase—a blacksmith and martial artist.…

It is an erotic romance of many species. This lush, exuberant novel interweaves the stories of three strong twentieth-century women whose lives are shaped both by their lusts and by the sights, sounds, tastes, scents, and textures of the southern Appalachian landscape. The women’s lives mingle in turn with the lives of others similarly influenced by their lusts and by different sensations of that landscape—among them moths, mice, birds, and immigrant coyotes. The shifts of perspective among Kingsolver’s vividly and voluptuously imagined human and nonhuman protagonists are both disorienting and fascinating. Of this work Kingsolver later writes, “Reader, hear my confession: I have written…

One of my all-time favorite books, Prodigal Summer is a compelling, gorgeous, and sometimes steamy story as well as a very thoughtful examination of our role as stewards of the land. Deanna Wolfe, a reclusive wildlife biologist, is studying a den of coyotes that have recently migrated into the Appalachian Mountains where she lives in an isolated cabin as a forest ranger. Her solitary life is disrupted by an intriguing and infuriating young hunter who invades her private spaces and her thoughts. I loved this book for the story and the characters. What I learned about coyotes and the importance…

From Aimee's list on activism to inspire and mobilize.

Barbara Kingsolver writes what I think is some of the most beautiful prose of any American novelist. She immediately sucks you in with interesting characters interacting in a complex and rich interconnected world. With this book, she sets these characters within the complex web of understanding and exploring the interconnections of the natural world and we begin with one central character and experience an outward spiral of interpersonal, social, and ecological interweaving.  

If you love Prodigal Summer...

Book cover of Let Evening Come

Let Evening Come by Yvonne Osborne,

After her mother is killed in a rare Northern Michigan tornado, Sadie Wixom is left with only her father and grandfather to guide her through young adulthood. Miles away in western Saskatchewan, Stefan Montegrand and his Indigenous family are displaced from their land by multinational energy companies. They are taken…

Prodigal Summer: A Novel by Barbara Kingsolver is set in my favorite place and time—1930s Appalachia. It’s my go-to southern novel I’ve read three times at different stages of my life. Each time I was transported in different ways thanks to Kingsolver masterfully interweaving three plots. Released in 2000, the tale still feels relevant and timeless. 

From Leah's list on southern books that transport us.

If you love Prodigal Summer...

Book cover of Shearwater Storm

Shearwater Storm by Arthur Winer,

Charlotte Rose’s quiet life on a remote island is forever changed the day Michael Cordero, injured and bleeding, steers his ketch, Shearwater, into her cove. Charlotte tends to Michael’s wounds, using the skills she’s learned caring for her husband and son, who are away fishing for salmon. As Michael recovers,…

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