
by Asa Hawk
United StatesAdded on January 13, 2026
Set on the Great Plains of the United States in 1833, in the region that is now southern Nebraska and northern Kansas, the narrative follows sixty-year-old Gerhardt Horst who is stricken with a stroke and thrown out on the open prairie. He survives due in part to the care of Pakskkiis, a Wichita Shaman . Born a woman, Pakskkiis assumes the social status of a man to survive in the male-dominated culture of the Pawnee. Together, along with a Pawnee crone, a mixed-blood boy, and a foundling infant, the two begin a passage through the uncharted possibilities of the early American West with all its savagery, solitude, and splendor. Coming into intimate and lethal contact with hostile tribes and renegade soldiers, Pawnee priests and Christian missionaries, tornadoes, and wildfires, this provisional family struggles to survive and overcome the obstacles of language, sexuality, culture, and religion, in a land of unbounded violence and beauty.
Extremely disturbingThis book is like a nightmare from beginning to end. Horrid events unfold one after another unceasingly. I am sorry I kept reading it - no redeeming value whatsoever.
Grassland is Asa Hawk’s first novel. His second, The Ferrotypist was just published.Grassland is not your run-of-the-mill western, and those who expect a run-of-the-mill western might be disappointed. This is much more. This is well-researched historical fiction with no romance. The prose is dense, but like cake, it is thick and rich, and the characters, like in both Hawk’s novels, are real, fascinating and memorable. Some may be put off by the violence, but if you read diaries and the very earl