D. J. Lee is the author of three scholarly works on the literature and history of the nineteenth century, including Romantic Liars: Obscure Women Who Became Impostors and Challenged an Empire. A recipient of the Susanne M. Glasscock Humanities Book Prize for Interdisciplinary Scholarship from Texas A&M University’s Center for Humanities Research, she also holds a PhD from the University of Arizona and an MFA from Bennington College. She divides her time between Chicago and Moscow, Idaho.

A Human History in the Wilderness

An Essay

by D. J. Lee

I had made an appointment with the Nez Perce National Forest archaeologist in Grangeville, Idaho, two hours east of my house, a direction I didn’t want to go: the roads were narrow and winding, and the dusty little towns were few and far between. I arrived at a one-story, bungalow-style building that I would come to know as standard Forest Service architecture. Inside, the offices had low ceilings, industrial-blue carpeting, gray linoleum, and laminate desks. Men and women strolled around in jeans and fleece vests. Cindy, the archaeologist who met me, wore a Forest Service khaki uniform with a gold name badge. She kept her head bowed and didn’t smile. I wasn’t sure if she was cross with me for taking up her time, or just introverted.

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