Book Summary and Reviews of In The Fields of Fatherless Children by Pamela Steele

In The Fields of Fatherless Children by Pamela Steele

In The Fields of Fatherless Children

A Novel

by Pamela Steele

  • Critics' Consensus (8):
  • Readers' Rating (2):
  • Published:
  • Mar 2026, 336 pages
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About this book

Book Summary

For readers of Jeannette Walls and Barbara Kingsolver, in this love story set in rural Appalachia during the Vietnam War, a young couple is torn apart by both global conflict and their families' ancient feud.

In late 1960s Appalachia, many things loom darkly over June Branham: the Vietnam War is dividing the country, and a strip mine is eating away the mountain at the head of the holler where she lives, threatening the natural landscape and the only way of life she has ever known. While still in high school, June has fallen in love. She is pregnant, and the father may be Ellis Akers. Ellis is the son of Solomon, a mortal enemy of June's stepfather, Isom. The feud is so old it fuels two vengeful men with the power of long animosity between rival families.

June's brother, Tom, leaves to enlist in the war, and so does Ellis. Suddenly, June is on her own, at sixteen with a newborn, and is a mother unable to protect her daughter from the wrath of Isom. Without warning, her baby is kidnapped. Guided by her love for the generations of women before her, but now desperately alone, June must carefully navigate the search for her child alongside family and strangers in a wild and disappearing landscape.

In the Fields of the Fatherless Children is a powerful story of love and perseverance, masterfully told by a writer of exquisite care who knows intimately the rural people of this time and place.

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Reviews

Media Reviews

"Vivid, atmospheric storytelling, steeped in regional traditions." —Kirkus Reviews

"Steele conjures a stark sense of place, depicting the strip-mined landscape...[A] ravishing story." ⁠—Publishers Weekly

"Steele gives eloquent voice to the hardships and resilience of rural Appalachian women...This is Barbara Kingsolver and Sharyn McCrumb territory, and Steele stakes her own solid claim in this fertile soil. While reflecting the era's social tumult, the novel also offers a timeless story about women's generational ties and the damage wrought by men's wars." —Booklist

"Here is a novel both compelling and meditative, both tender and gritty, and wholly remarkable for the way it conjures a place and time brought to life with vivid sensory details, raw emotion, and complexity. Pamela Steele is a wonderful writer who allows us to luxuriate in precise language and gives us characters we will long cherish. I loved every page of this lovely novel." —Silas House, author of Southernmost

"Among the ranks of contemporary writers, there remain some who know how to name—in the old ways—the confounding world around us. Pamela Steele is one such writer. She has listened closely to the voices most have forgotten. She has looked hard and long at the graceful, violent homeplace of her people. Her words unfurl like poems, delivered in dreams and visions and communions with the dead. In The Fields of Fatherless Children offers the reader a tale of survival, a geography of wounds, a multi-generational cartography of how to bear our scars and carry on." —Glenn Taylor, author of The Ballad of Trenchmouth Taggart

This information about In The Fields of Fatherless Children was first featured in "The BookBrowse Review" - BookBrowse's membership magazine, and in our weekly "Publishing This Week" newsletter. Publication information is for the USA, and (unless stated otherwise) represents the first print edition. The reviews are necessarily limited to those that were available to us ahead of publication. If you are the publisher or author and feel that they do not properly reflect the range of media opinion now available, send us a message with the mainstream reviews that you would like to see added.

Any "Author Information" displayed below reflects the author's biography at the time this particular book was published.

Reader Reviews

Write your own reviewwrite your own review

Janine_S

Finely crafted novel
This is a finely crafted novel set in 1960s Appalachian mining country. Like others set in this part of the country, I’m always in a saddened state when done. The poverty, misery and abuse that fall between the pages of these stories are heartbreaking and heart wrenching but make for some of the most insightful stories written. Such is this book.

Sixteen year old June Branham is pregnant, unsure who the father is - raped by one and loved by another. June’s brother, Tom, and June’s love, Ellis, are off to Vietnam. Her stepfather, Isom, hates Ellis for his mixed blood (but mostly because June’s mother, Bethel, had an affair with Ellis’s father. June struggles with the pregnancy and when Isom kidnaps her daughter, Grace, June is faced with dangerous choices.

The depictions in the book of the landscape of strip mining is dark. Rains make the overworked land collapse. Houses are swallowed up by floods. It’s pretty grim.

I liked June and the narrator, Granny Justice. June epitomizes the resilience and fortitude needed to survive in this landscape and time. The women in the novel are the strength - it’s never a surprise to see this in novels especially in times when people want to wipe out our contributions. Women can’t be vanquished.

I’d like to thank NetGalley and Counterpoint Publishing for allowing me to read this ARC.

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Author Information

Pamela Steele

Pamela Steele holds an MFA in Poetry from Spalding University. Her previous books are Paper Bird: Poems and Greasewood Creek. She has been awarded residencies and fellowships by the Djerassi Resident Artists Program in Woodside, California; the Hindman Settlement School Oak Ledge, in Knott County, Kentucky; the Jentel Artist Residency in Banner, Wyoming; and Fishtrap's Gathering of Writers in Joseph, Oregon. She lives on a ranch in the high desert of Eastern Oregon.

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