Oak Flat by Lauren Redniss is an important and beautifully produced piece of visual nonfiction that tells a very human narrative of the ongoing contested fate of Oak Flat, a high elevation tableland in southwestern Arizona that is sacred to the Apache people. However, for decades they’ve been fighting to protect this land from a large copper mining corporation, backed by powerful politicians and billions of dollars, from mining in Oak Flat and destroying the land. Redniss charts out the fortunes of two families on opposing sides of the conflict with a deep-rooted connection to the land. The Nosies, an Apache family, whose young teenage daughter is an activist and advocate for the Apache sentiment and the importance of these sacred lands to her people. On the flip side, you also follow the Gorhams, a family whose livelihood has been around mining for generations and whose patriarch was the first sheriff of the town back in the lawless days of Arizona state. It’s appreciable that Redniss tries to present all sides of the ongoing conflict, but you can’t help but deeply sympathize and root for the Apache people and the profound love and connection they have for their sacred land, hoping against all odds that the big mining corporation will not win this fight. Since it is an ongoing issue, you don’t get the resolution you may be looking for, but the text provides the context necessary to understand the turbulent history the Apache people have faced and the important traditions associated with the Oak Flat. The simple hand-drawn illustrations accompanying the text ground the narrative and help in place-making, and in creating a strong sense of the landscape. A minor quibble I had was that there are several conversations in the text presented in an interview format with several different people. At times, I found this disjointed and confusing to keep straight who’s who. Perhaps those sections could have been edited for clarity or given context before a specific conversation. On the whole, though, I found it well worth a read.