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Half-Burnt

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Set in nineteenth century Minnesota during the events leading up to the Dawes Act of 1887 (one of the biggest land grabs in the history of white and Native relations), Peter Grandbois' new novel, Half Burnt, follows the life of Hole in the Day, arguably the most important historical chief of the Ojibwe nation. Narrated by an aging, Métis priest as he takes the confession of Hole in the Day's right hand man, Niibiinishkang the novel slowly uncovers the mystery of who murdered Hole in the Day. But for a people who have seemingly lost everything is there an easy answer to anything, especially murder? As a spirit from the Land of the Dead tells our narrator: "You think like the chimookomaanag…That one thing leads to another, one cause leads to one effect. You think you can undo what has been done, but there are too many strands and you are tangled in them all." Soon it becomes difficult to tell where one story ends and the other begins as the narrator becomes caught up in the web of the many stories surrounding the life and death of Hole in the Day. Exhibiting the "robust storyteller's heart" (The Rocky Mountain News) that marked his debut novel with the formal innovation and poetic precision of his second award winning work, Grandbois' newest novel rejects previous narratives that paint Natives into what are essentially white, western boxes of "victim" or "warrior, " offering instead a contemporary vision of humanity's place on this sacred earth, one that transcends any notion of a "pure" culture, a vision that seems particularly relevant to a modern world where the standoff at Standing Rock over the Dakota Access Pipeline has similarly been characterized as a desperate battle by a dying people to protect the land that was taken from them, when the reality is the people and the land have been one all along.
Folgt in ca. 5 Arbeitstagen

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25,50 CHF