The background of the story is very
familiar to the author and her readers—it takes place on a North Dakota reservation in the not
too distant past. The most consistent elements of Louise Erdrich’s fiction for
me over time has been her ability to convey the unique effects that the
treatment of Native Americans in the United States has had on them over the
generations since the Civil War. It has
been over a 100 years, but the legacy of that era lingers on, and it is
especially significant for those who live on the reservation, who are choosing,
for whatever reason, to live away from both mainstream America as well as urban
America. We are resistant to confront
the consequences of our past—maybe that is true of every nation—and perhaps
fiction makes that confrontation more palatable. In any case, this is an excellent installment
into Ms. Erdrich’s body of work—and it recently received the National Book
Award, so I am not alone in thinking that.
In this tale, thirteen year old Joe
is the one telling the story, and while it includes a lot of things that you
would expect of Erdrich in the way of details about everyday lives on a tribal
reservation, the main event in the book is the brutal rape of Joe’s mother. The rape is an act of revenge, and the story unfolds
to reveal why retribution that is taken out of the hide of another can be far
more effective than directly damaging the hated person—it can affect everyone
for years to come. The book doesn’t play
this up, but it is not possible for tribal police to prosecute white people who
perpetrate crimes on reservations. There
is a substantially higher risk of being raped if you are a Native American, and
over 80% of rapes on reservations are perpetrated by serial rapists. They are too complicated to prosecute, and
the people who suffer are not the people who can mete out justice, which is
very wrong. The Violence Against Women
Act would close that loop hole, but it was voted down by House
Republicans. So the situation described
in this book still exists. The family
gets revenge, but at a cost, and the law is something that really needs to be
fixed. This book is an excellent story that is spun around
this real life problem.
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