Winter Prairie Woman is a sensitive story about memory, farming, and a woman on the prairie in the middle west of the United States in the Twentieth Century. Originally published by the Minnesota Center for Book Arts in a limited, hand-printed edition, Meridel LeSueur described the "This is a collective book. This means it is not a performance by one author in a room alone. Like a tree it was made by a communal movement of root, stem, flower and seed by a group of creators together summoning a communal work. The Minnesota Center for Book Arts summoned me to write a book for a series about winter. It excited me to summon my memory and feeling about winter and the image of the prairie woman came to me. I had never been excited by being asked by a group of skilled workers to make something together. It was as if they called forth in me some part of a communal creation of various skills and creative love. I began to compose something called forth by other creators with skill and love. The editors felt the same, editing my final script and working with the designer of the book on sentences, structure and form, each keeping alive together my wording and form but giving it further expertise. This glowed in us as knowledge and warmth. The illustrator entered into the growing form with the designer, the setting of type, even the making of paper. It began to take form in the creative energy of us all. Printer, proof reader, binder (hand sewn) it became a creation of us all. It did not even have the so-called author's name on the front page. The author and editor were thanked for their part in the whole creation. We all met to celebrate the book of our mutual skill and love." The limited edition soon sold out, and there grew a demand for the book. Midwest Villages & Voices reprinted it by offset press to give it wider circulation, yet preserving the spirit of the book, including new illustrations by Sandy Spieler. As LeSueur said, "It is a book for the hand of the reader who now becomes a part of the collective, receiving the maturity and beauty of the book made by us all."
“The people are a story that never ends, A river that winds and falls and gleams erect in many dawns; Lost in deep gulleys, it turns to dust, rushes in the spring freshet, Emerges to the sea. The people are a story that is a long incessant Coming alive from the earth in better wheat, Percherons, Babies, and engines, persistent and inevitable. The people always know that some of the grain will be good, Some of the crop will be saved, some will return and Bear the strength of the kernel, that from the bloodiest year Some survive to outfox the frost.”
Meridel LeSueur, North Star Country (1945)
Meridel LeSueur’s poetry, her short stories, and novels are a beloved part of the cultural and political fabric of our times. She was one of the great women literary and communal voices of the twentieth century, which her long life spanned. In describing her own roots Meridel wrote, “I was born at the beginning of the swiftest and bloodiest century at Murray, Iowa in a white square puritan house in the corn belt, of two physically beautiful people who had come west through the Indian and the Lincoln country, creating the new race of the Americas by enormous and rugged and gay matings with the Dutch, the Indian, the Irish; being preachers, abolitionists, agrarians, radical lawyers on the Lincoln, Illinois, circuit. Dissenters and democrats and radicals through five generations.”
Meridel was born on February 22, 1900, and she died in Hudson, Wisconsin on November 14, 1996. As a child she lived in Iowa, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas and Minnesota. She believed in giving voice to people’s struggles. She said she learned early to write down what they were saying, hiding behind water troughs in the streets, under tables at home—listening. Listening to the tales of the lives of the people, her writings were grounded in these grassroots, salt-of-the-earth stories and experiences of working people, of the poor, the disenfranchised, the dispossessed. She strove to make history a living, moving entity in our lives. She once said that words should heat you, they should make you rise up out of your chair and move!
She led a colorful and vibrant life. As a young woman, she studied physical culture and drama in Chicago and New York City, and she plied her talent in the silent movies in California as a stunt woman. As a young activist she lived for a time in Emma Goldman’s commune in New York City. She wrote from and was part of the great social and political movements of her time. Her writing encompasses proletarian novels, widely anthologized short stories, partisan reportage, children’s books, personal journals, and powerful feminist poetry.
Her early works, in addition to profound working class consciousness, are also focused on the struggles of women, and particularly poor women, those sterilized without their consent in so-called mental hospitals, those on the breadlines, those whose lives and oppression more traditional leftwing ideologues did not comprehend.
Her children’s books found heroes and sheroes in US history and are especially noteworthy for their non-racist depiction of Native American peoples and cultures. Meridel believed her writing could be a bridge making connections across many different cultures. The diverse communities that identify with and celebrate her work are a moving testament to the depth and power of her writing.
Meridel saw Halley’s Comet twice, once when she was 10 years old and again when she was 85. We are certain that the impact of her work will be felt the next time Halley’s comes around….and the next… and the next….seven generations and more from today! Meridel’s life and writings testify to the profoundly democratic idea that positive social change always bubbles up—and sometimes erupts—from below. With Marx she would agree that to be radical means to go to the root of things—and at the root of things are the people themselves. She would enthusiastica