She tried to move the Black Hills. One stone at a time they came, gradually being relocated amidst the beet fields of western Nebraska. Each visit to her sister in Sturgis brought another load, stones for paths and gardens front and back, for friends' gardens too, and strangers if they asked. Pretty rocks, she called them. Iron ore, granite, sandstone, mica peeling little sheets of glass, and iron pyrite, "fools gold." A rebellion against sameness, against stolid, German stoicism Now she's gone. The Black Hills remain, unmoved. Do the "pretty rocks" still glisten in the Nebraska sun?