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Lost for almost half a century and never before published, When
Montana and I Were Young is a remarkable primary account of a child
s life in the early part of the twentieth century. Margaret Bell
(1888 1982) was a rancher and horse breaker whose memoir tells the
story of a frontier childhood on the high plains of Montana and
Canada. Hers was not a typical childhood. Bell was barely seven
when her mother died, and her stepfather, Hedge Wolfe, moved Bell
and her three younger half-sisters far from their nurturing
grandmother to the Canadian plains and a life of extreme poverty,
hardship, and abuse. Mary Clearman Blew is a professor of English
at the University of Idaho in Moscow. She is the author of
Balsamroot and Bone-Deep in Landscape. Lee Rostad is the author of
Honey Wine and Hunger Root.
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