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A Land Remembered is a best-selling novel written by author Patrick D. Smith, and published in 1984 by Pineapple Press. It is historical fiction set in pioneer Florida. The story covers over a century of Florida history from 1858 to 1968.
Contents
1 Plot summary
2 The author
3 Characters
4 See also
5 External links
Plot summary
A Land Remembered focuses on the fictional story of the MacIveys, who migrated from Georgia into Florida in the mid-19th century. After settling, this family struggles to survive in the harsh environment. First they scratch a living from the land and then learn to round up wild cattle and drive them to Punta Rassa to ship to Cuba. Over three generations, they amass more holdings and money, and move further from their connection to the native, untamed land.
The author
Patrick D. Smith, a multiple award-winning author, was born in Mendenhall, Mississippi, and later moved to Florida in 1966. A Land Remembered is his sixth published novel, following The River Is Home, The Beginning, Forever Island, Allapattah and Angel City.
It is available in both hardcover and trade paperback editions. There is also a two-volume edition for children, which is used in many Florida schools.
Characters
Tobias
The first generation's main character. He became rich from cattle herding and later an orange grove. He gets malaria from an attack of several hundred thousand 'skeeters', but is healed (temporarily) by Miami Billie, an Indian medicine man. Died near the end of Zech's piece of the book when he became too weak from the cold to fight his malaria when he tried to save orange trees from a freeze. (He is the last ghost to appear to Solomon, his grandson.)
Emma
Tobias's wife. Her main occupation is cooking for all the men with the help of Pearlie Mae and Glenda. She never complains. Everybody loves her. She dies from a heart attack a few years before Tobias does.
Zech
The second generation's main character. He lived a somewhat lonely life away from other children and had two dogs, Nip and Tuck who were killed, and a Marsh tacky horse named Ishmael. He marries Glenda and has the son Solomon, called Sol. He has an affair with an Indian woman named Tawanda, which results in another son, Toby Cypress. Zech is an experienced gunman and horse rider and kills several bandits. When getting revenge his foot is shot and he is weaker till his death in a horse-riding accident and drowns.
Glenda
Zech's wife. She seems more of a tomboy in her adulthood and gives birth to two children throughout her life, one of which ends in a miscarriage. Sadly she dies near the end of Zech's life when she's impaled by a bull. Zech shoots the bull out of rage.
Solomon
The third generation's main character. He lived a sad life of power. After his father's death he became power hungry, wanting to leave a mark with his money and the business his family started. He calls himself "the least of the MacIveys". Eventually he finds Bonnie, a young waitress, and changes. After her death in a hurricane and a reunion with Toby he eventually realizes the destruction his greed has brought upon the land. He goes to Punta Rassa to live his last days. He dies of a heart attack at the end of the book.
Bonnie
Solomon's love interest. She's the daughter of an abusive father and is hired by Solomon as a housewife. The two live together for almost seven years. They finally admit they want to get married as she and Sol are in the roof rafters trying to ride out a hurricane. She is ripped away from Sol and is counted among the 2000 dead. Sol later dislikes the lake which carried their house away and dikes it.
Skillit
A black former slave. He is encountered by Tobias after slavery was banned, wearing only a pair of feed sack pants. He had nowhere to go, and was on the run when Tobias' dogs found him hiding in a hole. Tobias hires him. He is a great help in catching cows, since he is much stronger than all the other cattle drovers. He eventually marries a former slave, Pearlie Mae. He leaves later to start a farm, calling himself Skillit MacIvey on the land deed. Skillit only appears two more times in the book: when he returns for Tobias's funeral and when Sol remembers all the people in his life.
Pearlie Mae
A black former slave. Though half his age, she marries Skillit and gives birth to five children.
Frog
A hired worker, former town drunk. Bonzo and he began working for Tobias for their first successful mission. Frog is seen as almost a brother to Tobias and he is always a help. He dies from being impaled by the same bull that killed Glenda, and is buried next to Tobias and Emma. As he lies dying, he asks Zech if his gravestone can read "Frog MacIvey" and Zech agrees, claiming he would have done that anyway.
Bonzo
A hired worker, former town drunk. He says little, compared to Frog. He dies from malaria early in the book.
Lester
A hired worker that Zech hired to replace Bonzo.
Tawanda
Zech's Seminole Indian mistress. He only sees her three times. The first time when he and his father deliver cows to the Indian village, the second when Zech comes to get two new horses, the third when he visits the village again. When they come to Tobias' funeral, Tawanda's parents inform Zech of her death during childbirth. Zech buys a headstone for her that reads "Tawanda McIvey, Beloved".
Toby
Son of Twanda and Zech. He was ridiculed by the children in his village because of his white father, but was respected by the adults because of his MacIvey blood. When Zech visits the village, the two bond. When he is 15, he sees his father again, now with his other son, Sol, and the two brothers start to bond. Toby later becomes the village chief and has three children with his wife, Minnie. He comes to hate Sol for ruining the forest, and the two avoid contact for almost half a century. He sees Sol again when Sol is about to die, making his peace with his half-brother.
Minnie
Toby's wife. She made two appearances: Once when Sol had come back to tell Toby of Zech's death and another when Sol came to make peace with Toby before they die. She was in her twenties when she was introduced and she gave birth to three children.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Land_Remembered
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Replies
I am reading Where Men Win Glory by Jon Krakauer, the odyssey of Pat Tillman. It has a lot of detailed info about the War in Iraqi and Afghanistan.
Just recently finished Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand, a WW II story of survival. Great read especially if you like history.
(Mods, please permaban any forum member who refuses to read these books. tyia)
http://www.amazon.com/big-bend/dp/1456453270
And that notion of an idyllic and maybe preferable past Florida is necessary to suspend disbelief that a pre-air conditioned, mosquito infested, hostile and disease filled Hell it was as you sit there in your air conditioned, refrigerated sweraged and potable water supplied bungalow on the beach to enjoy it.
"Well Gary, the easiest way to look tall is to stand in a room full of short people." - Curtis Bostick
"All these forums, with barely any activity, are like a neglected old cemetery that no one visits anymore."- anonymouse
Now I see why you chose engineering.:)
:Griz
where I live prior to the invention of air conditioning. I mean the
skeeters we get at night are ridiculous. Swarms of them that
are literally like walking through insect clouds that eat you.
You're such a romantic, Gary.
Pardon me for misspelling sewerage, but I don't have the ability to edit the post.
"Well Gary, the easiest way to look tall is to stand in a room full of short people." - Curtis Bostick
"All these forums, with barely any activity, are like a neglected old cemetery that no one visits anymore."- anonymouse
http://www.vrbo.com/105186
"No matter the size of the fish, you can only put a bite size peice in your mouth."
Isn't that a Jersey accent? Surge pipe?
I always get a kick at my buddy from Jersey that butchers that term.. Sewage, sewer, seweraged (sewer system)
You forgot the "a". You have 6 minutes left to correct it.
"Well Gary, the easiest way to look tall is to stand in a room full of short people." - Curtis Bostick
"All these forums, with barely any activity, are like a neglected old cemetery that no one visits anymore."- anonymouse
Another one he stumb'es on... Pond Fronds. He's always callimg them "fromms"
I got here by driving a 1953 Dodge Coronet down US 1 in 1954.
Pond fronds? It's Palm Fronds, Dam Yankee.
http://www.amazon.com/big-bend/dp/1456453270
Ponds have fronds?
Learn something new everyday.
if I say so myself.
You need to capitalize the "f", just sayin
Good read overall, moves along at a nice clip and it is certainly interesting how the east coast was opened up by the railroad and that until then nothing really existed below Jax.
Only complaint about the book was that it seemed to rush to an end, I think more time could have been given to the turn of the century through the early 21st century.
You really have no clue, do ya? Ft Laud, Miama, all inhabited before the railroads, paved roads etc...
I have not read it, but will now.
The Swamp as mentioned earlier in this thread is an absolute great read about the Everglades from the point of destruction and then the start of the restoration years up until 2006.
Thank you for posting this book.
What other great books do y'all read about old Florida?
There is a book store in Tarpon on main street that has a nice historical section on Florida. It's worth the look if you are in town.