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Louise Erdrich Sets the Pace
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14864 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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10 / 1988 |
3,829 Words |
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William W. Bevis William W. Bevis American literature at the University of
Montana. His forthcoming book Mind of Winter: Wallace
Stevens, Meditation and Literature will be published later
this year. He is currently working on Ten Tough Trips, a book
on the literature of Montana that deals at length with Native
American novels. |
I couldn't do the touch for Grandpa, though. He was a hard nut. You know, some people fall right through the hole in their lives.
People have found stone grinders, hunting arrows, and jewelry of colored bones.
So I think it's no use. Even buried our things survive.
The quotations are from Louise Erdrich's first two novels, Love Medicine and The Beet Queen. Her new novel, Tracks, begins with the same terse compassion:
We started dying before the snow, and like the snow, we continued to fall.
Tracks is Erdrich's third novel about intertwined French, German, and Chippewa families (Erdrich's own heritage) on the reservation and in the nearby town of Argues, North Dakota. Love Medicine was set among the reservation Indians from 1934 to 1984; The Beet Queen focused on the mainly German townspeople of Argus, from 1931 to 1971. Tracks takes us back to the same reservation from 1912 to 1924, so that we meet the parents and see the childhoods of Lulu Lamartine and Marie Lazarre and a number of other memorable characters from Love Medicine. Erdrich's writing talent is serving an increasingly ambitious narrative of several peoples in one place. A fourth work in the series is planned.
In Erdrich's writing, an extraordinary prose technique is balanced against equally extraordinary characters. Nector Kashpaw, in Love Medicine, has just meet
... (1973 of 21153 Characters)
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