How Barbara Kingsolver helped Melissa Nygren appreciate moths
The Rosie and the Riveters singer shares what she loved about Barbara Kingsolver's classic novel.
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Melissa Nygren is of the group Rosie and the Riveters from Saskatoon. She recently read Prodigal Summer by Barbara Kingsolver, a novel about a reclusive wildlife biologist, a hunter who disrupts her solitary life and a young girl who lives down the road. She tells The Next Chapter how the book helped her reconnect with — and better understand — the wilderness:
A novel I'm reading now is called Prodigal Summer by Barbara Kingsolver. The main character creates her own position as a park ranger in the Appalachian Mountains. She is sort of all alone, but she has a very deep connection with nature. I'm always fascinated with that. I used to work as a tree planter, so I would be alone in the forest for long periods of time and I really, really loved that.
Another thing that's interesting in the book is that Barbara could really describe moths in a very beautiful way. Moths have such a bad rap in society — everybody is trying to shoo them out of their house. In my family, my aunts and my mom were all terrified of moths, so I learned to appreciate them in a new way after reading this book.
Melissa Nygren's comments have been edited and condensed.