(7/29/2024)
The flow of rivers is a metaphor in this story of love, grief, racism and inner strength. Young Victoria is a motherless girl with a grieving father and abusive brother. She finds love with a mixed race young man-Wil-who has native american blood. Tori's brother finds the coupling abhorrent and sets out to destroy their love.
After Wil mysteriously disappears, Tori finds herself pregnant and cannot face her family so she, too, leaves their orchard and escapes in the forest with a newborn. How will she survive in the woods with no resources? What happened to Wil and will she ever find "home" again? Tori faces a major decision so that she and her son can survive; her choices will haunt her for the next 20 years.
The book builds to a dramatic conclusion as Tori rebuilds a life for herself but at great cost. As the government threatens her home town with a new dam construction, Tori must uproot her life, her peach trees and the only home she has ever known.
The true story of this book is that the town she writes about- Iola- was indeed flooded by a new dam in CO during the 60s.This story, while fiction, provides a backdrop for the rivers that flow and those that are destroyed by the hand of man.