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Talking Volumes
Stone Heart: A Novel of Sacajawea is the Talking Volumes selection for April 2003.

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Talking Volumes
April 8, 2003
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Midmorning,
March 18, 2002
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A Minnesota book club is leading an online discussion about Stone Heart. Weigh in with your own thoughts and questions.
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RELATED LINKS
"St. Paul writer Diane Glancy imagines the life of Sacajawea": from the Minneapolis Star Tribune

A short excerpt from Stone Heart

"Review: Stone Heart: A Novel of Sacajawea": from the Minneapolis Star Tribune

Voices from the Gaps: Female writers of color

"A Conversation of Writing": from a Macalester College publication

Reviews of other Diane Glancy work

Diane Glancy: from Hanksville.org

 

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Stone Heart: A Novel of Sacajawea
Talking Volumes
Stone Heart: A Novel of Sacajawea
Diane Glancy
Overlook Press, 2003
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(From the publisher) In Stone Heart, Diane Glancy retells the story of American legend Sacajawea, the young Shoshoni woman who traveled with Lewis and Clark on their expedition to the West. Presented in Sacajawea's voice in the form of a journal, the book makes moving and illuminating fiction out of a famed piece of history that has long been masked by myth. Glancy adds breadth and immediacy to the story by juxtaposing excerpts from Lewis and Clark's diaries with her brilliantly imagined journal of Sacajawea.

Lewis and Clark recorded the external journey; its physical challenges and its wonders. Glancy's Sacajawea experiences the expedition on a different plane, one in which the dream of a small white stone shaped like a beaver is emblematic of the thin membrane between the worlds of the mundane and the magical. Sacajawea hears the clouds talking, feels the thunderous hooves of ghost horses, and savors the wetness where a buffalo calf licks her arm from the other side.

Although the Lewis and Clark trail has largely faded to a story told in glass beads and musket balls, fire pits and bison bones, in Stone Heart, it springs back to life in Glancy's work. At once a trail uncovered and a life revealed, Stone Heart draws a lingering portrait of a woman of resilience and courage.

Diane Glancy
© Macalester College
About the Author
(From the publisher) Diane Glancy has received the American Book Award, the Pushcart Prize, the Capricorn Prize for Poetry, the Five Civilized Tribes Playwrighting Prize, and the North American Indian Prose Award. She teaches literature and writing at Macalester College in St. Paul. Glancy is of Cherokee and German-English descent.

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