Confluence of Three Sisters' Literal/Figurative Inferences and Medical References
Set in Oklahoma, U.S., Ordinary Soil is a 9-chapter, 277-page, and October 2023 book by Alex Woodard.
Earlier on, protagonist Jake’s suicide attempt—his family would have cashed in on insurance fraud (his life insurance policy exceeded his plantation’s value, after all)—sets the plot’s pace. Why? The tragic answer lies in the Native American culture, family business, farming techniques, agrochemicals and mechanization, generational (mis)conduct, supernatural, reverence for the Great Spirit, adoration of Mother Earth, afterlife, health crisis, and physiology.
Originally, the featured ancestral land nourished, and, per the ancestor’s wish, would always nourish the Three Sisters—corn, beans, and squash—whose contextual mutualism transcends their literal tendency as this ingenious, indigenous concept of intercropping and organically farming non-GMO plants has minimal inputs and benefits the entire ecosystem.
Woodard describes the three plants’ three-pronged figurative mutualism (conversely) thus: aggressive chemical and mechanized farming (e.g. overcultivation, where depleted nutrients are offset by overusing dangerous fertilizers, toxic pesticides, strong herbicides, and deadly desiccants) has negative effects on soil microbiomes that, in turn, untypically and directly wreak havoc on our gut microbiomes via the food systems, eventually causing leaky gut-related chronic diseases.
Other themes: forced assimilation, epidemiology, colonialism, conservative versus progressive polices, elopement, intermarriage, Great Depression, dust storm, racism, remorse, institutional blackmail, bullying, introduced diseases, soil and anger management, drug and domestic abuse, resentment, cultural displacement, rehabilitation, end-of-life care, capitalism, reunion, coping mechanism, harsh parenting, empathy, family life, medical research, trauma, escapism, mental health, retribution, transgression, and health advisory.
He lists some of the synthetic fertilizers and suchlike chemicals—whether for agricultural or residential uses—like ammonia, NPK, carbaryl, 2,4-D, paraquat, atrazine, and glyphosate whose residues and metabolites, generational toxicity, and off-target effects on all chains of the living multicellular organisms include disrupting their shikimate pathways (absent in people) and other biochemical processes, depriving us of the critical building blocks, inhibiting neurodevelopment and neurotransmitters, and destroying the gut’s microbiome biodiversity. Eventually, they cause autoimmune and neurodegenerative disorders such as diabetes, HBP, diverticulitis and ulcerative colitis, Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, multiple sclerosis, leukemia, dementia, autism, cardiovascular illnesses, cancer, and chronic kidney disease.
The prophetic ancestor Aki’s shilup, a vengeful seasonal apparition on the prowl, offers the reader an intriguing and suspenseful pursuit of the thematic connection with the mind-body-soul: a metaphorical self-harm and environmental degradation, before the journaled family history inspires the ancestral energy Shilup and Jake to shake hands, where their peacemaking symbolizes “the present touch[ing] the past”.
Literary devices include: “wave of relief…tide of anger", "graveyard of records/receipts...paper tombstones...[and] cardboard casket", "memories were wagon ruts…swept away by the cruel wind of time", land addicted to chemicals..."diseased with weed and bugs...and apathetic in not producing", "the wrath of an angry earth," "million tiny birds of water...[with] hydric entrails", and "meth for breakfast…meth addiction for weight loss.”
A gloomy medical-and-biographical cautionary tale of intensive crop farming, Ordinary Soil encourages farmers to “walk it back”: reverse the ongoing humanitarian abuses in the food industry; adopt agricultural ethics in the food baskets; undo the nutritional collapse; and, instead, modernize indigenous farming methods to efficiently practice organic farming and to eliminate non-GMO products to avoid the trickle-down effects of inorganic farming because human ecology has linked them to endemic chronic diseases.
Ordinary Soil is steeped in insightful knowledge: it is a confluence of literary devices, politico-econo-social wisdom, and authoritative scientific viewpoints. Woodard wove Ordinary Soil with literal and figurative inferences and medical references. Seemingly, this artistic book has been yanked from [no accusation :-)]—or, at least, it befits inclusion in—a literature-friendly, peer-reviewed medical journal, if it exists. Such is its merit.