This book would make a great character study. If you are someone wanting to write something that takes place in Appalachia or in the Great Smoky Mountains, you should pick up the book to see what life is like for people there. Another way this could be used as a character study is if you have ancestors from the area; you can gain a better understanding of what their life was like.
I never thought about what these national parks were before they became parks. In the instance of the Great Smoky Mountains, people were living on those lands, having lives, having families, and having farms, and then they were all made to leave. It is a real sticky situation. I understand the desire to preserve nature, and ultimately, if those families had stayed on those lands, would nature have been preserved? They could say that they wanted to keep the lands as they were, but who knows what their descendants would have wanted? Would they have sold this land for homes or commercial purposes?
The writing started out very poetic, but I wish this book were told more in chronological order about these women rather than focusing on the connections between them, as it just became repetitive over time reading about people in somewhat of the same roles.
3.25 out of 5 stars.