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Alexie, Sherman - The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian
Junior has lived all his life on the Spokane Indian Reservation, but he decides to attend a non-reservation (read: all white) school in an attempt to find hope. His move ends up breaking apart his friendship with Rowdy, and soon, Junior has to fight for acceptance in both his new school and back at the reservation.
As an added bonus, he wants to be a cartoonist, so we get some truly hilarious cartoons (I love the romance novel cover lampoons). The book is illustrated by Ellen Forney.
Alexie does awesome voice in this book; Junior is sarcastic, funny, heartbreaking, and struggling to make sense of everything, usually at the same time. He doesn't overlook the desperate circumstances on the rez, but he also doesn't downplay just how much white complicity there is in that, from the white savior teachers to pretendians. I loved how complex Alexie made Junior's decision; how he does find more opportunities off the rez, but also how betrayed the rez feels, and how all this plays out in local basketball.
While the book is very funny, largely thanks to Junior's voice, it's also very depressing at times, just because of the circumstances in the rez, from the influence of alcohol to the way poverty and racism just keep grinding people down and down and down. Alexie is very good at navigating tragedy and humor all at once; what could be pathos is instead just Junior's harsh reality, but the book still avoids being a problem novel, largely by being very aware of the political complexity involved in Junior's life.
Definitely recommended; I'm looking for more of Alexie's books now.
Links:
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rachelmanija's review
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minnow1212's review
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gwyneira's review
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troisroyaumes's review
As an added bonus, he wants to be a cartoonist, so we get some truly hilarious cartoons (I love the romance novel cover lampoons). The book is illustrated by Ellen Forney.
Alexie does awesome voice in this book; Junior is sarcastic, funny, heartbreaking, and struggling to make sense of everything, usually at the same time. He doesn't overlook the desperate circumstances on the rez, but he also doesn't downplay just how much white complicity there is in that, from the white savior teachers to pretendians. I loved how complex Alexie made Junior's decision; how he does find more opportunities off the rez, but also how betrayed the rez feels, and how all this plays out in local basketball.
While the book is very funny, largely thanks to Junior's voice, it's also very depressing at times, just because of the circumstances in the rez, from the influence of alcohol to the way poverty and racism just keep grinding people down and down and down. Alexie is very good at navigating tragedy and humor all at once; what could be pathos is instead just Junior's harsh reality, but the book still avoids being a problem novel, largely by being very aware of the political complexity involved in Junior's life.
Definitely recommended; I'm looking for more of Alexie's books now.
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I bought this for my friend's daughter as a birthday gift, she turned 11 and is loving it. It seems to work well for all ages.
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Also, whoo! New author with a backlist!
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Hey, when I was on vacation I was at the library and saw a copy of DOES MY HEAD LOOK FAT IN THIS? and read through it (from one of your recs), thanks! :)
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Also, yay, people reading books I rec!
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Smoke Signals is wonderful too, Adam Beach is marvelous in it, so is Irene Bedard.
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Really, the casting for both films is love.
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I may not be able to use that one very often -- my buddy who sent me the freebie copy of Savage Honor claims it's mentally scarring. ;)
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I like Leslie Marmon Silko, too, though she's far more surreal.
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I'd heartily recommend all his stuff, films prose and poetry alike, but if forced to pick only one thing I'd go for the poetry; my favorite collections there are First Indian On The Moon and The Summer of Black Widows. If you want samples, there's are quite a few individual poems scattered about online
including past poetryspam postings on my LJ, I'd be quite happy to share my link collection.If you ever get a chance to hear him speak live -- poetry slams, book readings, whatever -- GO. Run, don't walk. He's that good.
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four poems (http://www.slipstreampress.org/horses.html) from an early chapbook, I Would Steal Horses
links to assorted poems and an audio file (http://web.ics.purdue.edu/~njp/Alexie.html) of Sherman reading his short story "Dear John Wayne"
assorted poems at the Beloit Poetry Journal (http://www.bpj.org/index/A.html#Alexie%20Sherman) (I am particularly fond of Inside Dachau, Things (For An Indian) To Do In New York City, and Breaking Out The Shovel.
assorted poems and excerpts (http://www.bpj.org/index/A.html#Alexie%20Sherman) on a rather awkwardly organized page -- I particularly like Crow Testament (http://incolor.inetnebr.com/tgannon/NAlitT.html#ctest) and Avian Nights (http://incolor.inetnebr.com/tgannon/NAlitT.html#avian)
How To Write The Great American Indian Novel (http://zunguzungu.wordpress.com/2008/02/15/how-to-write-the-great-american-indian-novel/) -- this is one that I'd dearly love to copy out onto some newsprint, roll up, and smack Cassie Edwards on the nose with...
My Alexie tagged posts (http://smillaraaq.livejournal.com/tag/sherman+alexie)
An untagged post (http://smillaraaq.livejournal.com/32509.html#cutid1) quoting Invitation
Um, I did warn you about the obsessiveness, yes? Just checking... ;)
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The basketball match was a really nice difficult situation to put Junior into. He dealt with an issue that usually I only see Walter Dean Myers really confront -- how can you try to help somebody improve their circumstances without rejecting their home and their culture, especially in the face of bigotry from both sides?
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I looooved the basketball match, and how it wasn't a simple sports movie moment.