The untold history of Conestoga told through a graphic novel


 
The Thread
 
The Thread's Must-Read
FeatherThief
"The Night Watchman"
by Louise Erdrich


Buy this book

Two years ago, Louise Erdrich succumbed to a nasty bug and took to her bed for a time. She slept, she daydreamed and she finally rose with a conviction that her next novel could be found in letters that her grandfather, Patrick Gourneau, had written in a particularly tumultuous period of his life.

“The Night Watchman” is a fictional story constructed around the real-life 1950s history of the attempt of the U.S. government to “terminate” the rights of Native Americans to their lands, assets and their sovereignty.

Erdrich’s grandfather was the chairman of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Advisory Committee, even as he held down a job as a night watchman at a local manufacturing plant. Unpersuaded that this was the “emancipation” for Indians that members of Congress claimed it was, he quickly saw the federal resolution for what it was: a move to strip Native people of their remaining independence.

In the novel, we sit with Thomas Wazhushk through his solitary hours as he guards the plant and strategizes about how to fend off the termination. We meet his daughter Patrice, or “Pixie,” as she embarks on a dangerous quest to find her sister. And we travel with the next generation — Wood Mountain, a young boxer, Patrice’s dear friend, Valentine, and the book-smart Millie, who is brought into the tight circle of the family.

More than 100 tribes lost land to the termination policy, although 78 would regain it. Erdrich confides in the novel’s afterword, “Much of this book was written in a state of heavy emotion, as I remembered the grief my grandmother and mother’s siblings suffered as the continued political fights took their toll and my grandfather’s health began to suffer.”

Listen for an upcoming Book Circle conversation with her at 9 a.m.

-Kerri Miller
Sponsor
Sponsor
 
This Week on The Thread
How a graphic novel resurrected a forgotten chapter in American history
In “Ghost River: The Fall and Rise of the Conestoga,” Native artists retell the events of a brutal massacre in pre-Revolutionary Pennsylvania and bring a painful history to life on the page.
'The Hidden Girl' is smart, but not entirely human
"The Hidden Girl and Other Stories" by Ken Liu
Buy this book

Ken Liu is an acclaimed author, translator and poet who's won multiple awards for his short fiction. But his new collection doesn't come together — some stories are gorgeous, while others fall flat.
'Apartment' will stay with you, long after you shut the door
"Apartment" by Teddy Wayne
Buy this book

Teddy Wayne's new novel is a portrait of loneliness and male insecurity set against the backdrop of academia in the mid-1990s — and a precious, rent-stabilized apartment in Manhattan.
In 'Minor Feelings,' Asian American racial trauma is laid bare
"Minor Feelings: An Asian American Reckoning" by Cathy Park Hong
Buy this book

Cathy Park Hong's essays serve as a major reckoning, pulling no punches as the author uses her life's flashpoints to give voice to a wider Asian American experience, one with cascading consequences.
'Hood Feminism' is a call for solidarity in a less-than-inclusive movement
"Hood Feminism: Notes from the Women That a Movement Forgot" by Mikki Kendall
Buy this book

Mikki Kendall reveals how feminism has failed to consider populations too often excluded from the movement's banner — and forgotten to weigh the breadth of issues affecting the daily lives of many.
'Facebook: The Inside Story' reveals a company made in its founder's image
"Facebook: The Inside Story" by Steven Levy
Buy this book

Journalist Steven Levy's rich history of the social network traces Facebook's cascading crises to the worldview and early decisions of its founder, Mark Zuckerberg.
In 'Foul Is Fair,' Lady Macbeth goes to prep school
"Foul is Fair" by Hannah Capin
Buy this book

Hannah Capin's new young adult novel is a modern-day retelling of “Macbeth” — centered on Lady Macbeth, now a high-schooler taking bloody revenge on the prep school boys who assaulted her at a party.
'Supreme Inequality' makes a case that the top U.S. court has widened the wealth gap
"Supreme Inequality: The Supreme Court's Fifty-Year Battle for a More Unjust America" by Adam Cohen
Buy this book

Lawyer and journalist Adam Cohen explores five decades of Supreme Court opinions and comes to a rueful conclusion: These decisions have greatly exacerbated the space between rich and poor.
Survival of the friendliest: How our close friendships help us thrive
"Friendship: The Evolution, Biology, and Extraordinary Power of Life's Fundamental Bond" by Lydia Denworth
Buy this book

On average, people have only four very close relationships, author Lydia Denworth finds, and very few people can sustain more than six. But the effect of these few core relationships extends beyond our social lives.

Preference CenterUnsubscribe

This email was sent by: Minnesota Public Radio
480 Cedar Street Saint Paul, MN, 55101