On a few sandy acres in the middle of the harsh wild prairie of South Texas young Helen Sewell grew to adulthood as hardy and tenacious as the brush that grew around her. This is her story.In 1908 at the age of eleven Helen moved with her family to what would later become Jim Hogg County. Shaped by her rugged environment she worked with her father in the field doing a man''s work for three years without benefit of schools churches or medical attention. Then filled with desire for an education she began to acquire an unorthodox haphazard one that eventually led to college. She tutored children taught school for a time and served as county/district clerk. Then she met and married Texas Ranger later sheriff Pell Harbison. On the ranch they bought near Hebbronville they raised six children and shared a life of challenge growth and stubborn hard work. After her husband''s death Helen Harbison herself ran the ranch for thirty more years.Holland provides an accurate picture of life in South Texas in the first half of this century and a fascinating portrait of a woman of the Texas brush who was determined independent and capable in an age when women were not expected to be.