Mystery character of the month and Kerri's pick
 
 
Mystery character and book of the week

Ready for this month’s Thread Mystery Character? Let’s go!

This character is discovered on a famously epic quest and they are fierce and frightening at first glance, leaping out to confront intruders.

But when the brave protagonist in this book challenges this character, their true nature is quickly unmasked.

This character confesses to the travelers that the character puts on a good show because that’s what’s expected of them but that it conceals the truth.  

And yet when the ultimate test arrives in a number of brave deeds, this character will meet the moment.

The person who created this character grew up in the east but found their way to the barren, windswept plains of South Dakota, where they began the story that would make their fortune.

The book that emerged from this person’s mid-life career change created a new genre and made this writer a household name.

Can you name the character, the book in which the character appeared and the person who wrote that book?

When you have the answer, email Kerri at kmiller@mpr.org. Or watch for the answer in next week’s Thread newsletter.


Big Books, Bold Ideas is asking a series of writers to reflect on how they see America and its democracy in this fractious, tumultuous moment to take the broader view of who we are in this time of disharmony and disunity.

Eboo Patel, who founded the country’s largest interfaith organization in Chicago, believes we Americans are in urgent need of a new guiding principle for our changing democracy.

He writes in his 2022 book, “We Need to Build,” that a fresh manifesto for a new era in America could sound like this: “We the varied peoples of a nation struggling to be reborn are defeating the things we don’t like by building the things we do.”

One of Patel’s remedies for our divisiveness is a recommitment to civic spaces and conversations and the rise of new civic leaders to guide us.  

He writes: “The institutions that nurture pluralism do not fall from the sky or rise from the ground.  People build them.”


— Kerri Miller | MPR News

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This week on The Thread
Coming up Tuesday: A romance book show

On Tuesday, July 9 at 9 a.m. MPR News host Angela Davis will talk in studio with Minnesota romance author Abby Jimenez and an owner of the new romance bookstore in Minneapolis, Lauren Richards. Listen on your local station or on the MPR radio app.
The shadow fighters of the Civil War

The Civil War is remembered for its sweeping battles: Gettysburg, Atlanta, Antietam. Less known are the small troops of men, enlisted by both sides, to fight far from the battlefields.

This week Patrick K. O’Donnell joined MPR News host Kerri Miller on Big Books and Bold ideas to talk about his new book, “The Unvanquished,” which masterfully tells the story of this forgotten chapter of history.
Ask a Bookseller: ‘Star Bringer’ by Tracy Wolff and Nina Croft

Emily Sands of the Williams Bookstore in Williamstown, Mass., recommends “Star Bringer” by Tracy Wolf and Nina Croft.
A San Francisco store is shipping LGBTQ+ books to places where they are banned

In what she calls "Books Not Bans," Becka Robbins sends titles to groups that want them in the face of a movement by conservative advocacy groups and lawmakers to ban them from schools and libraries.
Appetites: Potato cakes and camel meat stand out on trip to Grand Forks

If you’re road tripping this summer, you may be looking for good eats beyond the Twin Cities, and there’s always a hidden gem if you know where to look. Guidebook author Amy Rea recently spent 24 hours in Grand Forks, N.D.,  and wrote about it for foodie newsletter Heavy Table.
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