My first question to those of you who love books is this: which book are you? Say someone burns all of the books, including My Pet Goat, and we are faced with a famous situation. Each of us must memorize your favorite book. For the rest of your life you will painstakingly memorize and then BE this book. This book will exist through you. But your life will be devoted to muttering and remembering every word written between the covers. And also, this book must be important enough for you to die for it. For if during the memorization process this book is discovered in your possession you will be confined in a place known as LITMO. And although we are told over and over how great those confined there have it, people commit what their keepers call "hanging gestures." -- Louise
Birchbark Blog
The River Wife by Jonis Agee
Louise Erdrich - Tuesday, June 12, 2007
This is the book keeping me up nights. Not suprising since in it a young woman is kept up nights reading the story of Annie Lark, the first in a line of women who marry river men. Annie is easy to love, from the moment we meet her during an earthquake, to her last days--which come all too soon, even after a couple hundred pages. The novel is nearly 400 pages total, so you can live in it a few days, and trust me, there are other River Wives to love. Jonis Agee wrote this full and unforgettable novel over nearly a decade, adding it to her impressive list of books this summer when it offically comes out in July. So satisfying you will wonder why books like this seem so few and far between.
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Anonymous commented on 18-Oct-2008 05:00 PM
Agee rewrites history, with a twist. Rescuing a real-life flood victim through an act of imagination, she paints a moving, rich, and entrancing portrait of the effects of love. Each scene is a perfect vignette, evoking the landscape and ethos of a lost era.
Boozhoo from BirchBark Books
Louise Erdrich - Friday, June 01, 2007
We are a small, independent bookstore located in the Kenwood neighborhood of Minneapolis. Author Louise Erdrich owns the bookstore which focuses on Native American authors and titles, although not exclusively. We decided it is time we blog about the wonderful books, authors and events we host via our store. Look for reviews and book news from us, coming soon!
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Or maybe, along the same maybe vein, "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" by Betty Smith. I remember skipping archery or swimming or some other healthy activity at summer camp in Maine to devote myself to it - having borrowed it from another camper when my own stock of books ran out. Lucky day. How else would I have learned the bizzarely satisfying experience of reading a book that broke my heart? Oh sure, it migh have been some other book, some other camp, some other day, but it happened to be THAT book. So I sobbed like a baby into my coarse gray bunkbed blanket, finally toddling to the con (bathroom) to blow my nose again and again and wash my blotchy face with plenty of cold water before anyone would catch me at it. Oh bizarre bookish bliss.
(Now that I live in Brooklyn, however, let me tell you - the tree that grows in Brooklyn that's supposed to be such a poetic metaphor for struggling against all odds to persevere -the ailanthus -is a real stink weed. )