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The amazingstory of Pearl Mattman as told by granddaughter Linda Diane Sickles. The family legend was that 3 year-old Pearl was left by her woodsman father in the care of friends, who then took off with her, changed her name to Leona and raised her as their own two states away. She was not to learn of her true identity until she was a grown woman. Was this all true? Did her first husband, a Canadian Metis Chippewa, vanish forever at the train station, leaving her with two babies? Why did her second husband wait for so many years to reveal an important truth? Too bad Grandma Pearl wasn't still alive to clear it all up!…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The amazingstory of Pearl Mattman as told by granddaughter Linda Diane Sickles. The family legend was that 3 year-old Pearl was left by her woodsman father in the care of friends, who then took off with her, changed her name to Leona and raised her as their own two states away. She was not to learn of her true identity until she was a grown woman. Was this all true? Did her first husband, a Canadian Metis Chippewa, vanish forever at the train station, leaving her with two babies? Why did her second husband wait for so many years to reveal an important truth? Too bad Grandma Pearl wasn't still alive to clear it all up!
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Autorenporträt
Pearl faced family tragedy and lost love with the strength and courage that would have been expected of a turn-of-the-century homesteader of the upper Great Plains. The Pearl that Linda Sickles reveals, her maternal grandmother, is mirrored down into the generations, and what began as a work of family story mixed with historical fiction became a moving process of self-discovery and spiritual healing. Linda grew up learning that Grandma Pearl had been stolen as a baby, given another name and raised on a North Dakota homestead; that she married a Metís from Canada named Jean Baptiste Ouellette and gave him two daughters, the second of whom was Linda's mother Violet. The rest of this story was pieced together from research in genealogy and history, from interviews with relatives and by studying troves of letters and photos. For many years Linda taught in public elementary schools, and especially enjoyed introducing the pleasures of reading and writing to young children. Now retired, she lives in the Pacific Northwest. Her children and grandchildren are near and dear. Linda and husband Robert are also authors and illustrators of the children's picture book Honey Girl & Bella: A Hero's Journey.