What do you think?
Rate this book
192 pages, Hardcover
First published June 1, 2003
Author Biography:
Louise Erdrich is one of the most gifted, prolific, and challenging of contemporary Native American novelists. Born in 1954 in Little Falls, Minnesota, she grew up mostly in Wahpeton, North Dakota, where her parents taught at Bureau of Indian Affairs schools. Her fiction reflects aspects of her mixed heritage: German through her father, and French and Ojibwa through her mother. She worked at various jobs, such as hoeing sugar beets, farm work, waitressing, short order cooking, lifeguarding, and construction work, before becoming a writer. She attended the Johns Hopkins creative writing program and received fellowships at the McDowell Colony and the Yaddo Colony. After she was named writer-in-residence at Dartmouth, she married professor Michael Dorris and raised several children, some of them adopted. She and Michael became a picture-book husband-and-wife writing team, though they wrote only one truly collaborative novel, The Crown of Columbus (1991).
The Antelope Wife was published in 1998, not long after her separation from Michael and his subsequent suicide. Some reviewers believed they saw in The Antelope Wife the anguish Erdrich must have felt as her marriage crumbled, but she has stated that she is unconscious of having mirrored any real-life events.
She is the author of four previous bestselling andaward-winning novels, including Love Medicine; The Beet Queen; Tracks; and The Bingo Palace. She also has written two collections of poetry, Jacklight, and Baptism of Desire. Her fiction has been honored by the National Book Critics Circle (1984) and The Los Angeles Times (1985), and has been translated into fourteen languages.
Several of her short stories have been selected for O. Henry awards and for inclusion in the annual Best American Short Story anthologies. The Blue Jay's Dance, a memoir of motherhood, was her first nonfiction work, and her children's book, Grandmother's Pigeon, has been published by Hyperion Press. She lives in Minnesota with her children, who help her run a small independent bookstore called The Birchbark.
My travels have become so focused on books and islands that the two have merged for me. Books, islands. Islands, books. Lake of the Woods in Ontario and Minnesota has 14,000 islands. Some of them are painted islands, the rocks bearing signs ranging from a few hundred to more than a thousand years old. So these islands, which I'm longing to read, are books in themselves...--that I had to read Books and Islands in Ojibwe Country.
I can't imagine home without an overflow of books.Now, I knew I was going to be extraordinarily biased towards this work, what with my own heart and soul being overtly displayed in the book's title and generously explored in the limited content through sentences such as the one above. What I didn't expect was a rather philosophical turnaround regarding a particular slogan that has plagued the modern timeline for at least the past four years. MAGA: Make America great again. You see, Erdrich has a sense that follows a similar trajectory, but her perspective is far more one of MOGA: Make Ojibwe great again, a concept that, thanks to the entrenched, complicated, and often sordid interweaving that winds through this country of mine, necessarily implies MpAGA: Make pre-America great again, or perhaps that should be Make post-American great again. Ideally, there wouldn't even be an America, and sense of restoration would be devoted to smaller concerns of sturgeon populations, fluent Ojibwe-speaker populations, thunderbirds (actual ones, mind you), Manoominikeshii, elm trees surviving the ever warmer winters of encroaching climate change, humans once again giving birth on the islands of their ancestors.