Book 31 Killers of the Flower Moon

 

Killers of the
Flower Moon
by David Grann fulfilled the category “A Book You Know Nothing
About” for the PopSugar 2022 Reading Challenge. I picked several random books
for the prompt, but my library job makes it tough to not know anything
about a title.

I grabbed a few
that had topics I had little knowledge about. I picked up The Beautiful
Cigar Girl
, a nonfiction featuring Edgar Allan Poe. Also, I grabbed Triangle
about the Triangle Fire. Reading The Beautiful Cigar Girl was a slog. It
had a history of Poe and tales of a horrible murder of a young girl in New York
City in 1841. My thoughts turned to The Devil in the White City, but
this book was a pale comparison to that one. The pacing felt off and
spoiler—they never solved the murder, nor gave good information about Poe’s odd
demise. It was disappointing.

Instead, I
grabbed Killers of the Flower Moon. It came through my circulation desk
frequently when first published. The title intrigued me and I downloaded the
audio. Wow, I’m glad I did. I knew nothing about the events in the book. More
history that I somehow missed.

In this
nonfiction, the author relates the history of the Osage tribe, who are pushed into
new territories. They are finally settled in what is now Oklahoma. And guess
what? Oil is found on their lands. Because of how tribal law and Native
American dealing with the government work, the tribe became rich, the richest
people per capita in the world (from the blurb). By the 1920s, many of the Osage
families were enjoying the high life to its fullest.

Until they
started dying one by one.

The book
horrified me, especially since it’s nonfiction. You can guess who was killing these
people and letting the murders go unsolved. It happened because they had money,
because they had land rights, because they were living a cushy life, because
they were brown. Some white folks didn’t like that. By the time the
investigation got moving—law enforcement dragged their feet—they realized more
than a few deaths occurred. Teems of tribesmen were killed in various ways, and
their claim on the oil and the land were deferred to others—usually whites. The
whole idea and execution (literally) of the plan to remove the Osage from their
oil and their land was horrific. They should teach this book in high school.
These historic events need to be put into the light.

I could go on, but
this is not a political blog. Read the book, please and email me. We’ll talk.

The subtitle includes
the words “And the Birth of the FBI.” Honestly, that caught my attention as
much as the other half, “The Osage Murders.” Yes, the Federal government sent
agents in to help solve the murders. The assigned men worked together in a new
way to help solve crimes ignored by local law enforcement. Honestly, that
“birth” of a federal agency had nothing on the story of the people in that
town. It’s haunting and heartbreaking.

I give Killers
of the Flower Moon
by David Grann Five Oil Strikes and a Bowed Head in
sympathy and shame.

 

 

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