Shopping cart is empty.

Birchbark Blog

Thank You, Pilgrims

Louise Erdrich - Sunday, November 22, 2009
Thank you, Pilgrims!

No, not buckle pilgrims -- book pilgrims.

 Our little bookstore would never survive without the Pilgrims who come to visit us from every part of the world.  Thank you for coming to visit us.  Thank you for drinking coffee at the Kenwood Cafe.  Thank you for sitting in the reading chairs and for telling us how and why you came to Birchbark Books.  Thank you for sharing the green stuff that lubricates the wheels of civilization.  Over the summer and fall, we've have visitors from Italy, Canada, China, Germany, England, Nigeria, Ireland, Turkey, Sweden, Japan, Romania, Mississippi, North Dakota, and Maple Grove, Minnesota, from the nations of Leech Lake, Red Lake, White Earth, Turtle Mountain, Pine Ridge, Rosebud, and ICELAND ( !), to name just a few locales where literati decide that when visiting Minneapolis they will find Birchbark Books.

It is always such a pleasure to find out how and why people arrive at the blue Birchbark door (blue to resist evil spirits).  Often they have been dragged in by a relative, it is true.  But that relative has a love of books and little bookstores, and passes this on.  Many times the next generation is imbued with the spirit of the place.  We have children who have grown up reading such books as A Coyote Solstice Tale, by Thomas King, pictures by Gary Clement.  The perfect book to read in the Birchbark Loft.  This is a wonderful coyote sweet and funny book, a gentle anti-Christmas craziiness story that resonated with me and will, I think, with every mother and father whose children's visions of sugar plums require them to visit a crowded mall.  It made me want to drink hot chocolate and curl up with a good book.

I plan on curling up (again) with Our Knowledge Is Not Primitive, Decolonizing Botanical Anishinaabe Teachings, by Wendy Makoons Geniusz.   This book is several things at once: a primer on truth, an innovative Anishinabe-English language text, a grand discussion of what has been already written about Anishinabe use of plants, and a delightful act of love.   Decolonized knowledge of the world allows a person access to the entire range of human experience of nature -- from use to song to dream to dance.  This work is eye-opening and joyous .  And it is one of my favorite books of the year.   


Comments
Johanna Garcia commented on 28-Nov-2009 07:00 PM
Dear Louise,
I haven't seen you in almost 9 years. I know because that's how old our youngest children are. I wanted you to know that my students are once again (it's irreplaceable, as far as I am concerned) reading Birchbark House and loving it. I am so grateful as a teacher (I teach lower grades now) to have this book to accompany my students in their leap into literacy. Thank you, thank you, thank you. Greet Persia for me,
Johanna Garcia
Marta commented on 27-Dec-2009 03:44 PM
You've also had a visitor from Poland. Even though I live n Berlin, I come from Poland. Hope you enjoyed the book I have left for you in the bookstore. Smiles!
Janet commented on 29-Dec-2009 11:22 AM
And then there are the customers who live in a not so sexy locale, someplace like Minneapolis.
Anonymous commented on 05-Jan-2010 02:49 PM
You missed counting me also. I visited the store in July and I'm from France, although an American who has lived in France for 35 years. This fall I even gave a talk on "The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse" to my book club made up of French women who had never heard about Louise Erdrich and had little knowledge of Native Americans. It was a success!
Barbara Carlier
Post a Comment!

Canoe Family
RSS

Recent Posts


Tags

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

Archive