Louise Erdrich's Future Home of the Living God imagines a near-future America where evolution has begun running backward and the government has begun rounding up pregnant women to control reproduction. Cedar Hawk Songmaker, a twenty-six-year-old woman who is four months pregnant and was adopted as an infant, searches for her biological family on an Ojibwe reservation while hiding from authorities. Erdrich, a member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians and one of the most honored contemporary American novelists, combines speculative fiction with her characteristic attention to Native American experience and family complexity. The novel is written as a journal to Cedar's unborn child, giving it an intimate urgency. Erdrich explores what remains meaningful when the future is uncertain, how love persists in conditions of terror, and how Indigenous communities that have survived previous apocalypses might navigate another. Future Home of the Living God is darker than Erdrich's earlier work, reflecting the political moment in which it was written, yet also contains her signature humor and tenderness. The novel resists genre conventions, refusing to explain its premise or offer resolution. Essential reading for fans of literary dystopia or Erdrich's broader body of work.