The powerful first novel in the award-winning Cash Blackbear series, from the
bestselling author of Where They Last Saw Her
Winner of the pinckley prize for best debut novel
'Masterfully weaves two stories in a seamless, vivid narrative' - Los Angeles
Review of books
Minnesota, 1971. Nineteen-year-old Renee 'Cash' Blackbear spends her days
playing pool, drinking beer and driving trucks for the local wheat farmers.
Bounced around foster homes like so many other Ojibwe children, Cash doesn't
bother much with friends - except her guardian, Sheriff Wheaton, who's kept an
eye out for her since she went into the system.
When the body of a murdered Ojibwe man is found discarded in a cornfield,
Wheaton asks Cash for help. The residents of the nearby Red Lake Reservation
have good reason to distrust outsiders, and Cash may be the only one who can get
them to talk. But racial tensions run deep along the Red River, and soon Cash
isn't only searching for justice: she's fighting for her life.