Shopping cart is empty.

Birchbark Blog

Victim of Narrative

Louise Erdrich - Sunday, January 31, 2010
Our first book and supper club selection was Too Much Happiness, by Alice Munro.  I chose the book because I am a great admirer of Alice Munro and because I love short stories.  She never lets me down.  Mordant, ordinary, strange, funny, offhandedly sublime.  The two nights of book club discussion were so much better than I'd feared (as an introvert).  The people who came were tremendous and they had loads to say so I didn't have to carry the conversation at all.  Elation!  And I must say that the dinner by Kenwood Cafe was utterly delicious and left me warm and happy.  But was there too much happiness?  Well, the title is found in the last story of the book -- possibly the last words of a female mathematics genius.   Too much happiness, indeed.

Yet my distress over my addiction continues, and I seek some affirmation that will free me from the endless Aubrey/Maturin series of sea novels about The British Navy, a series well known as the tar baby of narrative (too much boredom?  Alas, no, vertiginous sea battles!  Utterly compelling characters, both male and female)  I've known relationships to founder on these rocks.  Marriages to beat against the lee shore of these novels and succumb.  Once you've started, with Master and Commander (forget the movie), you'll be keel hauled right in and there goes your winter.  You'll be a victim of narrative.

Coming up in May: the publication of Mohamed's Ghosts, by the young old-school prize-winning journalist Stephan Salisbury.  His book is about all of us -- victims of narrative following 9/11.  He cared to think about what was happening to the ordinary people who belong to a mosque, struggle to be American and to follow their beliefs as well.  This is a wrenching and outrageous story of our own shadow country conjured out of fear.

If I can unstick myself from Patrick O'Brian I will let you know how I did it.  I'm going to check out a 12 step sea novel program . . .  


Comments
Anonymous commented on 02-Feb-2010 01:23 PM
hoka hey! fight the good fight against surfeit of PO'Brian. My wife and i love the dog page-- how about a dog blog? next time we come to Minn/StPaul, we'll drop by (we're in Los Angeles).
Marlee Atkinson commented on 12-Feb-2010 11:43 AM
Louise,

Just recently heard about your new novel (which I will order from Birchbark), and wanted to send out a congrats to you from Austin Peay State University. We all miss you and hope the best for you in the coming years. I must admit that your visiting was one of the best experiences of my college education. Thank you, thank you, thank you! -Marlee Atkinson (the redhead)
Scarlet commented on 19-Feb-2010 02:33 AM
Honestly, there is no escaping Aubrey/Maturin. I devoured the series three years ago and now I'm listening to them (wonderfully read by Simon Vance). It has launched me on a hopeless Napoleonic Wars and sea novel obsession. I thought that surely I would be tired of it by now, but the fascination continues.
ann commented on 09-Mar-2010 08:22 AM
Addiction is as addiction does-I want to suffer from Tiger Woods
illness. Alas millions of dollars are not coming my way right now.
I do enjoy your illustrations as in your National Geographic book and hope that you continue this expression of your thoughts..Alice Munro's book has so many stories that were published earlier and I did read some of them and what is your next selection for discussion?
P S Susan's hospitality impressed me and your store is wonderful !
Post a Comment!

Canoe Family
RSS

Recent Posts


Tags

adventure E.L. Doctorow Czech Writer post holiday devoted customers Native Arts Women and Trees photography Fireworks Patrick O'Brian Interview health care reform Gryphon Press Ha Jin gardens Botany S.C. Gwynne ireland Anishinabe language revitalization William Trevor cafe closing Book Review Canada city of books fresh water france Tree Houses Bleak House Green Team Ojibwemowin State Troopers neighborhood Dartmouth friends Wendy Makoons Geniusz Keeping Heart on Pine Ridge The Birchbark House Jim Harrison thank you friends thanks incarnation Ojibwe Up Late Again how good looking you are Gail Caldwell Makoons Minnesota Easter Island Greenland peculiar touches of green and gold spring 2666 The Farmer's Daughter show your love Anton Treuer Stephen Salisbury coyote The Resilient Gardener twins monkey in a dryer aquifer birchbark house series Master Butchers Singing Club Crushing Books Ice Emily Johnson Too Loud A Solitude Nemesis knowledge bill mckibben Climate Change Rare Books anniversary Catalyst Mohamed's Ghosts Roberto Bolano NACDI:All My Relations favorite dog china solstice, Thomas King Empire of the Summer Moon Peak Water The Game of Silence This Green World Remarkable Trees Zombies italy Dogs The Ojibwe Pembina Kate DiCamillo Wolf Hall Beth Dooley birchbark t-shirt The Royal Prussian Library Wastepaper sweden ependent tree books Victory Gardens Anishinabemowin The Blue Sky Vic Glover Love Poetry Peak Oil Alice Munro support leaves and snow pilgrims The Wealth of Nature north dakota Kenwood Gardens Philip Roth Guthrie Theater t-shirt Minneapolis Michael Jackson cafe Let's Take the Long Way Home buffalo World on the Edge The Porcupine Year Light in August Aubrey/Maturin Mankato Powwow Small Bookstores as Commons plants Tar Sands book and dinner club Hilary Mantel Milkweed Press Native People germany Too Much Happiness Our Knowledge Is Not Primitive Unnatural Disasters Collective Denial the most romantic city in the world customers Bill Moyers Journal green favorite book Brown Dog Bohumil Hrabal Louise More Remarkable Trees Keepers of the Trees favorite tree H2Oil local economy The Transition Handbook japan Video Chickadee joy Magers and Quinn Chitra Divakaruni mississippi British Navy Keystone XL Gary Clement School Gardens Birchbark Books President Obama boarding school post holiday reads ependent

Archive