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Earlier this year, in "I come to school for this class," I wrote about a terrific project in Arizona through which students at Westwood High School in Mesa, Arizona read literature by American Indian writers. The project was developed by James Blasingame and Simon Ortiz at Arizona State University.
I was pleased to see more about the project in "The Answer Sheet" --- a blog in the Education section of the Washington Post. Blasingame was their guest blogger. His wide ranging "An unusual introduction to Native American YA lit" touches on the writing of Joseph Bruchac and Sherman Alexie.
I have a vivid memory of when I was six years old and pulled The Snowy Day, by Ezra Jack Keats, off the shelf in the elementary school library. On the cover was a dark boy in a red coat out in the snow. I instantly figured he was Indian, he wasn't, but I thought he was. I connected to that main character almost instantly in a lot of ways.
Alexie won the National Book Award for The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian. There's a lot in the book that I really like because I connect with the character, the setting, the experiences... It is real and brutally honest. In one sense, I find it a bit too real, and I wonder if it didn't need to be quite that way... I'm thinking of his character's use of "faggot." I hear kids back home at Nambe toss that word around and I look at the young boys and wonder how that feels to those who may be gay?
Anyway, I am glad to learn that Alexie identified with the little boy in The Snowy Day and that he shared that memory with Jim. At the start of each semester, I ask students to bring in a book they remember. Tomorrow, I'll let them know about Alexie and his memory of The Snowy Day.
2 Comments on Sherman Alexie on THE SNOWY DAY, last added: 9/13/2010
I remember reading that book too. Funny I never really thought about the race of the boy. I remember seeing that he was brown, but apart from that I didn't think about it much. Funny how certain children's books stay in your mind years after you've read them. Blessings. Ravynwolfe.
Anonymous said, on 9/13/2010 11:24:00 AM
While Alexie is brutally honest, I don't think he is heavy-handed with his message. So there's no narrative voice that breaks in to explain to the reader that the word is inappropriate, but I think Alexie expects readers to realize that it's a little rich to be so aware of prejudice and still use a word like "faggot." Will some readers miss the point? Yes. But I don't think you can write a really good book while constantly catering to your stupidest reader. You just have to write the book and have some faith in your audience.
Fans of Sherman Alexie's The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian will be happy to know that he is working on a sequel. I read this in an April 21st interview of Alexie published at a website called failbetter.com.
Some of you may know that he is working on another YA novel called Radioactive Love Song. In the interview, he says he set that book aside to work on a sequel to Diary. In the sequel, Arnold is a sophomore, and there's a romance with Penelope.
The interview is packed with information. He writes about the death of his sister and father. Here's an excerpt, about his appearance on the Colbert show:
You were on the Colbert Report in October—one of the only guests who’s ever been able to make Stephen Colbert speechless. What was it like being on the show?
It was great, but it’s funny because Indians are so invisible and because my career has gotten so big that I think people…they don’t forget that I’m Indian, but it becomes very secondary to the success. When I was on Colbert I had a double consciousness or triple consciousness about it…I was in the moment but then I was also thinking that this is really revolutionary for Indians…a rez boy holding his own verbally with one of the best in the business. It was big. I was proud that I also have that artistic ability. It was fun. He was a great guy. He came into the green room afterwards and congratulated me, which was very decent of him.
Alexie also talks about poetry, his love of writing poetry, and about his new book of poems, Face. Do head over to the site and read the interview.
Disclosure: Readers of American Indians in Children's Literature know I've written a lot about Alexie's Diary and that it is on my lists of recommended books. Recently, a couple of friends have found it problematic for its use of the word 'faggot.' In light of that and the recent suicides of two 11 year old boys who were taunted as gay, I'm going to reread the novel.
2 Comments on News: Alexie working on sequel to ABSOLUTELY TRUE DIARY, last added: 5/18/2009
He did very well on Colbert -- it was a lovely thing to see.
My recollection, having read the novel recently, is that the word wasn't used in a way which had...I suppose I'd call it narrative approval. I didn't come out of it thinking, oh, Sherman Alexie's got a bias (but then, I'm familiar with "The Business of Fancydancing," so I suppose I'd usually be inclined to give Alexie the benefit of the doubt -- which can sometimes be a good thing, and sometimes not!) I'll be interested to hear what you think after re-reading.
I thought Alexie's book very good, but I've been a fan of his for sometime. I did wonder what you thought though about some of the elements of the book, such as the only way for the character to make it in life is to get off the reservation and a white teacher is the one who gets him to do that. His parents drink too much, his father doesn't make sure he gets to school all of the time and it is the white basketball coach that allows the character to really pour forth his talents. Not to mention the white girlfriend. But just as Alexie is not afraid to tell the truth about his experiences, he is also not afraid to show that discrimination against homosexuals is a real thing teenagers face. Jennifer
In Sherman Alexie's novel, Indian Killer, Marie is a college student enrolled in a Native lit course taught by Dr. Mather. She is Native. He is not. Because it's a Native lit course, she hopes there will be other Native students in the class. That was not the case. Here's an excerpt from page 58:
While Marie was surprised by the demographics of the class, she was completely shocked by the course reading list. One of the books, The Education of Little Tree, was supposedly written by a Cherokee Indian named Forrest Carter. But Forrest Carter was actually the pseudonym for a former Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan. Three of the other books, Black Elk Speaks, Lame Deer: Seeker of Visions, and Lakota Woman, were taught in almost every other Native American Literature class in the country and purported to be autobiographical, though all three were co-written by white men. Black Elk himself had disavowed his autobiography, a fact that was conveniently omitted in any discussion of the book. The other seven books included three anthologies of traditional Indian stories edited by white men, two nonfiction studies of Indian spirituality written by white women, a book of traditional Indian poetry translations edited by a Polish-American Jewish man, and an Indian murder mystery written by some local white writer named Jack Wilson, who claimed he was a Shishomish Indian.
Marie approached the professor:
"Excuse me, Dr. Mather," Marie said. "You've got this Little Tree book on your list. Don't you know its a total fraud?"
"I'm aware that the origins of the book have been called into question," said Mather. "But I hardly believe that matters. The Education of Little Tree is a beautiful and touching book. If those rumors about Forrest Carter are true, perhaps we can learn there are beautiful things inside of everyone."
Today is December 31, 2007. We’re ending one year and starting another. Looking over the NY Times list of best selling children’s books, I note two books that are on the lists.
These two books capture all that is good, and all that is not good, about books by and about American Indians.
On the picture book list is Jan Brett’s The Three Snow Bears. It represents all-that-is-not-good. I would not buy it.
On the chapter books list is Sherman Alexie’s The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian. It represents all-that-is-good. I recommend it, and I give it as gifts. It is astounding on so many levels.
Before I start this discussion, I want to state clearly that I do not believe Jan Brett (or anyone who likes her new book) is racist or misguided. Mis-informed, or maybe, mis-socialized, mis-educated….That is the root of the problem.
Both books have been on the best selling list for 14 weeks. As of today The Three Snow Bears is ranked at #4; Absolutely True Diary is ranked at #5.
The accompanying NYT blurb for The Three Snow Bears: "Aloo-ki and the Three Bears: the Goldilocks tale goes to the Arctic Circle."
The blurb for Absolutely True Diary: "A boy leaves his reservation for an all-white school."
Jan Brett is not an indigenous person. But like many writers, she has written (and illustrated) a book in which Native imagery figures prominently. A lot of writers retell Native stories, changing values and characters in such a way that the story can no longer be called Native. Pollock disneyfied The Turkey Girl, a story told among the Zuni people. Brett didn’t try to retell a Native story. She told an old favorite classic, and set her story in the Arctic. Her Goldilocks is an Inuit girl she named Aloo-ki.
The book flap for the hardcover copy says that Brett went to the NunavutTerritory in northern Canada, I gather, to climb to the Arctic Circle marker. While there she visited a school and according to the flap (note: authors don’t generally write the material on book flaps), “Jan saw the many intelligent, proud faces that became her inspiration for Aloo-ki.”
Why is “faces” modified with “intelligent” and “proud”? Is it Inuit faces that need these modifiers? Do you see such modifiers about the faces of any-kids in any-school? (I also want to say at this point that Brett's inspiration reminded me of Rinaldi's inspiration when she saw the names of Native kids on gravestones at Carlisle Indian School. Rinaldi was so moved by their names that she used the names, creating characters to go with them.)
The flap also says that she visited a museum where she “marveled at images of Arctic animals in Inuit clothes and felt a door had opened.”
My colleague, Theresa Seidel, addresses problems with the story (and the flaps) in her open letter to Jan Brett. She points out that in The Three Snow Bears, we have another book in which an author/illustrator puts Native clothing on animals, effectively de-humanizing American Indians.
Yes---Beatrix Potter did that, too, and nobody is making a fuss over that, but there is a difference. The humanity of the people Potter’s bunnies wear is not questioned. Those people are not adored and romanticized, nor are they thought to be a vanished people. Some people might put Princess Di on a pedestal and swoon over who she was, but they don’t do that to all of the English people. In contrast, far too many people think we (American Indians, Inuits, First Nations) no longer exist. We do, however, make frequent appearances in fiction, as mascots on sports fields, as inspiration for troops whose helicopters and battleships and missile’s named after Native tribes, and on products from tobacco to automobiles to foodstuffs. For too many, we are an idea, not a living, breathing people whose kids go to the same schools as yours do.
Brett had good intentions. She was inspired by the people, their art, their world. And she she wrote and illustrated this book that subtly and directly affirms problematic notions of who we are. It is a beautifully illustrated book. (As a work of low fantasy, we must suspend our disbelief so we buy into the polar bears living as humans do. They’re a bit goofy though…The polar bears wear their parkas when they go out, but leave their boots behind.)
Aloo-ki is surprised to come upon “the biggest igloo she had ever seen.” That’s worth a challenge, because it suggests that Aloo-ki is accustomed to seeing smaller igloos. Problem is, most people think that igloos are cute dwellings, about the size of dog houses. They’re actually quite large. If you saw the film, Atanarjuat (Fast Runner), you saw just how big igloos are. (Go to the movie’s website and view the galleries http://www.atanarjuat.com/galleries/movie.php).
In sum, Brett’s book is pretty to look at, a trinket, a decoration, but Native peoples are not trinkets or decorations.
Turning now, to Alexie’s book…
Alexie is Spokane. He grew up on his reservation. His book is largely autobiographical. It is HIS story, his LIVED story, that he gives us in Absolutely True Diary. He doesn’t retell a traditional story. He gives us a story of a modern day Native boy, living life in these times, not some far-off, exotic place, distant in time and location. His story is note cute or charming. It is gritty.
We can agree that children who read picture books have different needs than those who read chapter books. But it IS possible to write picture books about present day Native kids. Native authors who’ve written precisely this kind of book are Joseph Bruchac, Joy Harjo, and Cynthia Leitich Smith.
Today, Diane Chen (a blogger at School Libray Journal) wrote about the need for discussion and growth, so that the children’s book world (and American society) can move beyond the place we are STILL at, where problematic books about American Indians are written, published, favorably reviewed, bought, and read by kids across the country.
We can do better, but the Jan Brett’s and their editors, their publishers, and reviewers, teachers, librarians, parents, booksellers, all have to listen to our concerns. This is not, from my point of view, an issue of racism. It is an issue of not-knowing, and being unwilling to admit errors.
With a new year upon us, can we give it a try?
.
0 Comments on Jan Brett and Sherman Alexie as of 1/1/1900
Anonymous said, on 12/31/2007 3:03:00 PM
Honestly, you try to find fault and insult in the minutiea of life. the whole world is not against native peoples. I am going to quit reading your posts on the listserve because of the constant carping. Sorry I'm anonymous, but I am afraid you will post this like you did that other person's e-mail. Sorry.
Anonymous said, on 12/31/2007 3:47:00 PM
Thanks Debbie,
I just read Sherman Alexie's book and then my 10-year-old son snagged it away from me and devoured it in one day! (He's probably too young, but I couldn't say no once he'd started and was so into it--he literally could not put it down). We both just loved it and wanted more information, so your blog was the first place I went. Thanks for the thoughtful posts and for posting the u-tube of Alexie talking about the book. For the record, I really hope that school libraries will decide to carry it and will not shy away because of its frank discussions of masturbation or alcohol or death -- the valuable things my son learned and the joy he had reading such a well-written novel far outway the moment of embarrassment we both had when he asked me, "mom, what's a boner?" and I blushed a little before explaining, :-) (but I'm glad we got to talk about it.) We talked about the book quite a bit: Will said he liked it because the author "talked about sad things in a really funny way," which I thought was a great analysis.
Happy New Year! And thanks for keeping up the blog -- it's a great resource.
--Annette Wannamaker
Anonymous said, on 12/31/2007 10:42:00 PM
I have to agree with anonymous as well. Each time your posts pop up on the listserv I know it's going to be something negative. It appears you do more harm than good and that's truly a shame. I too will be deleting your posts from this point on. The listserv shouldn't be used as your personal soapbox. You only alienate people that way.
jpm said, on 1/1/2008 6:22:00 AM
Afflicting the comfortable must be one of the least-rewarded of human activities.... The two Anonymous comments in response to your Brett/Alexie post notwithstanding, you have made many positive comments about good books with accurate representations of Native people. Those who have been disturbed by negative comments -- have they actually followed up by looking into the many excellent books discussed on Debbie's blog and in her posts to ChildLit and other listservs? I hope curiosity overcomes their worry about challenges to the things that are familiar to them! The children they work with will benefit!
Alkelda the Gleeful said, on 1/1/2008 10:48:00 PM
I appreciate the work you do, Debbie. There are so many things you've brought up that I'd love to talk about with you. In reading your blog, most of the time I feel it most appropriate for me to be in the "listening" role, as it were.
I read Alexie's book in one sitting. He's a good storyteller, and has that gift of making the reader identify with the protagonist even though their personal life experiences may be different.
Pat M. said, on 1/2/2008 9:18:00 AM
Debbie, your insight on the differences in intelligence of both authors is something that I've faced practicing broadcast journalism in the southwest. As an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation, I was the only individual in my journalism classes in college to be able to distinguish the subtle & often times, brutal distinctions made in the media regarding Indian (& other minorities) culture and contemporary life. The mostly, Anglo, students' reactions were quite similar to the anonymous postings that preceed mine. I also tangled with the Associated Press when they would title a story on the wire beginning with race: "Indian driver killed in head-on" while other stories began with "Driver killed in head-on." It's kind of like when the non-Native individuals started selling their "Indian" jewelry under the portal in Albuquerque's Old Town then wondered what they were doing wrong. Thank you for your hindsight and best of luck in your educational endeavors!
k8 said, on 1/3/2008 9:52:00 AM
I always appreciate your posts both here on your blog and on Child-Lit. The posts are always thoughtful. I worry about those like the two anonymous commenters - they seem to have a problem with open dialogue, something at the very heart of civic discourse. Learning to listen to others is such an important part of this. When they respond this way, I worry that they silence others. (btw, do you know Cheryl Glenn's book Unspoken: A Rhetoric of Silence?
Anonymous said, on 1/11/2008 1:33:00 PM
I loved "Absolutely True" - it's a great book. Would it have been any less great had it been written by someone else? I don't think so. Might "Indian Killer" have been considered offensive had it been written by someone else? I think it likely.
Ben said, on 1/12/2008 7:07:00 AM
I feel a bit dirty posting in the same comment section as the "anonymous" posters who are evidently both unaware of the continuing colonization of Native peoples and disproportionately fearful of critical analyses that might challenge that colonization.
But, as you are discussing Alexie's Absolutely True here, I'll offer my thoughts. While I think the book is well written, as is most of his work, it is an overstatement to claim that Absolutely True represents "all that is good" with books featuring Native characters. Like Debbie, I appreciate the brutally honest portrayal of life on and off the reservation. And the contemporary setting is always a wonderful thing to find in American Indian children's lit. Yet, however honest they might be, I think that many scenes will contribute to white stereotypes about Indians (ie, Indians are alcoholics, savage fighters, etc). Like most of Alexie's books, the intended audience here seems to be largely non-Native. Therefore I'm not so sure that narrative honesty is as important as how these portrayals of Indians will resonate in the collective white mindset. Yes, alcoholism and fighting exist in Native communities. But do we really need to further highlight that fact for an audience that still largely delights in images of the lazy drunk / Indian warrior?
I know that others have already slammed Alexie for these issues. And I know that Alexie has responded by claiming that honesty is his primary concern. I don't want to slam him because I did like the book, but there are far too many issues to praise it without qualification.
Sherman Alexie's outstanding YA novel, The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, was nominated for a National Book Award in the category, Young People's Literature. The finalist list was released on Wednesday.
In that category, Louise Erdrich's Birchbark House was nominated in 1999.
I think the winner will be announced mid November...
Visit Alexie's website for reviews and info, and a link to an mp3 audio excerpt of the book. Yes, he is the reader of the audio book.
The photo I uploaded is from the press page of his website. Curious... the photo on the publisher's website is a reverse image of the same photo!
.
1 Comments on Alexie's YA Novel Nominated for National Book Award, last added: 10/13/2007
Alkelda the Gleeful said, on 10/13/2007 9:12:00 AM
Hurrah for Alexie! I'm just thrilled about this. For people who hope Alexie will write other Young Adult novels, Flight isn't targeted for that audience per se, but I would definitely recommend it for YA readers.
LA BLOGA CROSSWORD I must have had some time on my hands because I came up with a crossword puzzle for La Bloga readers. It's all about the literature, of course, so if you are a regular visitor to La Bloga or have more than a passing interest in Chicana/o and Latina/o stories, characters, writers, publishers, and reviewers, you should breeze through this puzzle.
I can't figure out how to paste the puzzle directly onto the La Bloga pages, so you are going to have to click on another link to see the grid and the questions. There are two versions: the first looks oversized on my screen but loads up quickly, the second version fits better on my screen but it may have too much black for some printers and it takes a bit more time to load. The questions are the same in either version.
In any event, if you have the inclination, check out the puzzle of your choice, print it, solve it, and let me know what you think about this diversion. I hear that solving crosswords is good for keeping the brain cells young and vigorous; too bad I can't do crosswords with my back. I think I killed a few thousand brain cells putting the puzzle together so it's a trade off for me. Here are the links:
NEWN accepts submissions in all categories ONLY between January 1 through March 31.
Fiction: Open to all genres and types of previously unpublished fiction up to 3,000 words. NEWN encourages submissions of novel excerpts. NEWN will note that the excerpt is out of context and requires a little more understanding from the reader. Pick no more than 3,000 words of your novel that can semi-stand alone and show off your novel.
Pay: $10 and one copy for short stories or novel excerpts.
"New Year’s Eve, 1975: Arturo Belano and Ulises Lima, founders of the visceral realist movement in poetry, leave Mexico City in a borrowed white Impala. Their quest: to track down the obscure, vanished poet Cesárea Tinajero. A violent showdown in the Sonora desert turns search to flight; twenty years later Belano and Lima are still on the run.
...The Savage Detectives follows Belano and Lima through the eyes of the people whose paths they cross in Central America, Europe, Israel, and West Africa. This chorus includes the muses of visceral realism, the beautiful Font sisters; their father, an architect interned in a Mexico City asylum; a sensitive young follower of Octavio Paz; a foul-mouthed American graduate student; a French girl with a taste for the Marquis de Sade; the great-granddaughter of Leon Trotsky; a Chilean stowaway with a mystical gift for numbers; the anorexic heiress to a Mexican underwear empire; an Argentinian photojournalist in Angola; and assorted hangers-on, detractors, critics, lovers, employers, vagabonds, real-life literary figures, and random acquaintances.
... The Savage Detectives is a dazzling original, the first great Latin American novel of the twenty-first century."
"For ten years, Norma has been the voice of consolation for a people broken by violence. She hosts Lost City Radio, the most popular program in their nameless South American country, gripped in the aftermath of war. Every week, the Indians in the mountains and the poor from the barrios listen as she reads the names of those who have gone missing, those whom the furiously expanding city has swallowed. Loved ones are reunited and the lost are found. Each week, she returns to the airwaves while hiding her own personal loss: her husband disappeared at the end of the war.
But the life she has become accustomed to is forever changed when a young boy arrives from the jungle and provides a clue to the fate of her long-missing husband.
Stunning, timely, and absolutely mesmerizing, Lost City Radio probes the deepest questions of war and its meaning: from its devastating impact on a society transformed by violence to the emotional scarring each participant, observer, and survivor carries for years after. This tender debut marks Alarcón's emergence as a major new voice in American fiction."
"Still Water Saints chronicles a momentous year in the life of Agua Mansa, a largely Latino town beyond the fringes of Los Angeles and home to the Botánica Oshún, where people come seeking charms, herbs, and candles. Above all, they seek the guidance of Perla Portillo, the shop’s owner. Perla has served the community for years, arming her clients with the tools to overcome all manner of crises, large and small. There is Juan, a man coming to terms with the death of his father; Nancy, a recently married schoolteacher; Shawn, an addict looking for peace in his chaotic life; and Rosa, a teenager trying to lose weight and find herself. But when a customer with a troubled and mysterious past arrives, Perla struggles to help and must confront both her unfulfilled hopes and doubts about her place in a rapidly changing world.
Imaginative, inspiring, lyrical, and beautifully written, Still Water Saints evokes the unpredictability of life and the resilience of the spirit through the journeys of the people of Agua Mansa, and especially of the one woman at the center of it all. Theirs are stories of faith and betrayal, love and loss, the bonds of family and community, and the constancy of change." Flight,Sherman Alexie Grove Atlantic - April
"[Alexie's] first novel since Indian Killer is a powerful, fast, and timely story of a troubled foster teenager—a boy who is not a legal Indian because he was never claimed by his father—who learns the true meaning of terror.
The journey for this young hero begins as he’s about to commit a massive act of violence. At the moment of decision, he finds himself shot back through time and resurfaced in the body of an FBI agent during the civil rights era. Here he will be forced to see just why Hell is Red River, Idaho, in the 1970s. Red River is only the first stop in a shocking sojourn through moments of violence in American history. He will continue traveling back to inhabit the body of an Indian child during the battle at Little Bighorn and then ride with an Indian tracker in the nineteenth century before materializing as an airline pilot jetting through the skies today. During these frantic trips through time, his refrain grows: Who’s to judge? and I don’t understand humans. When finally, blessedly, our young warrior comes to rest again in his own contemporary body, he is mightily transformed by all he’s seen."
, Mayra Montero Farrar, Straus and Giroux - January
"Havana, 1957. On the same day that the Mafia capo Umberto Anastasia is assassinated in a barber's chair in New York, a hippopotamus escapes from the zoo and is shot and killed by its pursuers. Assigned to cover the zoo story, Joaquín Porrata, a young Cuban journalist, finds himself embroiled in the mysterious connections between the hippo's death and the mobster's when a secretive zookeeper whispers that he knows too much. In exchange for a promise to introduce the keeper to his idol, the film star George Raft, now the host of the Capri casino, Joaquín gets information that ensnares him in an ever-thickening plot of murder, mobsters, and finally, love.
The love story is another mystery. Told by Yolanda, a beautiful ex-circus performer now working for Havana's famed Sans Souci cabaret, it is interwoven with Joaquín's underworld investigations, eventually revealing a family secret deeper even than Havana's brilliantly evoked enigmas. In Dancing to "Almendra," Mayra Montero has created an ardent and thrilling tale of innocence lost, of Havana’s secret world that was the basis for the clamor of the city, and of the end of a violent era of fantastic characters and extravagant crimes. Based on the true history of a bewitching city and its denizens ... ."
What a great list of reading! And a crossword to boot!
I used to watch in amazement as the Sergeant Major attacked the daily crossword in Pacific Stars & Stripes. He'd finish it with a grunt of satisfaction, then give me the newspaper. One day I decided to look at his work, wondering where all the speed comes from, given his daily vocabulary and interests.
He cheated. He answered with words like Fxlgub or Sargvints, any letter that he chose. Every box had a letter, every question an answer.
I promise to be more directed when I do your puzzles.
I remember reading that book too. Funny I never really thought about the race of the boy. I remember seeing that he was brown, but apart from that I didn't think about it much. Funny how certain children's books stay in your mind years after you've read them. Blessings. Ravynwolfe.
While Alexie is brutally honest, I don't think he is heavy-handed with his message. So there's no narrative voice that breaks in to explain to the reader that the word is inappropriate, but I think Alexie expects readers to realize that it's a little rich to be so aware of prejudice and still use a word like "faggot." Will some readers miss the point? Yes. But I don't think you can write a really good book while constantly catering to your stupidest reader. You just have to write the book and have some faith in your audience.