The GenIUs Writes Again

The Genius Writes Again.

I suspect you have to have lived near or on a Reservation to truly truly appreciate the humor in these books. And there's plenty of careful, clever humor to appreciate.

The pathos and the heartfelt, though, is universal. I say The Genius because though there are bum notes as far as clunky writing every now and then, this Spokane (Washingtion State) Indian knows human nature. He is not afraid to point out "his people's" foibles and he does it with wit and description and narrative. Not offensive.

Of course, many of these traits are everyman's. Like all great writers, if you were e-mailed the text of a few untitled pages, you would know immediately who had written it.

A few of you may rember the film Smoke Signals, - big news for the one reaosn that it was produced and paid for and acted by Native Americans. I lived near Spokane when it came out. I didn't see it even though it was filmed in and arround eastern Washington.

I bought the video on a whim. It starts with a woman driving a car backwards through the reservation. Why?

"It only goes in reverse" is the only explanation given in the film.

I had lived and worked and shared veterans' and Fourth of July powwows, though I never figured out the twisted logic that allowed Native Americans - Indian is usually the preferred word, frankly, in casual conversation - to celebrate the Fourth of July.

Sherman Alexie helped me to understand why, though I stil don't have all the pieces. When a writer can create within me better understanding of something and amuse, entertain and make me choke up every now and then, too, I call him or her a Genius.

If you've seen the end of Smoke Signals you'll understand the lore and the good work that it is. He is a an American treasure.

I actually was going to post this on the 28th but I wanted to do the author credit. And then I just put out three newspapers in four days.

Ten Little Indians is the name of a childhood nursry rhyme, a 1939 Agatha Christie Novel (name later changed to "And Then There Were None") and this new book.

I posted a summary of the review of the books in a far far away place. Here @ Blogcritics.org

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Article Author: Temple Stark

A graphic designing wordsmith, with a decade-plus career in community journalism behind me. Take a mean photo, have a new camera, and have been riding the wave of Twitter for more than a year.

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Article comments

  • 1 - Amber

    Jul 02, 2003 at 1:37 pm

    The genius misspelled "genius" in the title of this entry.

    :)

  • 2 - The Theory

    Jul 02, 2003 at 2:00 pm

    Agatha Christie also has a book titled "Ten Little Indians"... I am very fond of Agatha's writing.

    peace.

  • 3 - Mark Saleski

    Jul 02, 2003 at 3:04 pm

    for just a second my brain scrambled "Agatha Christie" into "Christina Aguilera"....phew...that was confusing!!

  • 4 - The Theory

    Jul 02, 2003 at 3:11 pm

    haha. that's awesome. I could totally see my brain doing something like that.

    peace.

  • 5 - Murphy Horner

    Jul 02, 2003 at 5:42 pm

    Sherman Alexie is brilliant! THe man is very very funny, in a great dark way.

    The reverse-only car shows up in one of his short stories I've read, too. I'm sure it must be based on a real car.

    My Athabascan friend [Native Alaskan] commented on how the nomenclature of "Indian" or "Native American" changes with where you are.

    In Alaska, Native Alaskan or just "Native" was the term I heard most. Of course, there, there really was a distinction between Eskimo, Aleut and Indian. Athabascan is Indian.

    But when my friend moved to California, she discovered that Indian was preferred.

    Sometimes.

    She doesn't prefer either term, apparently. But she hates the word "Squaw."

  • 6 - Temple A. Stark

    Jul 02, 2003 at 9:46 pm

    Typo. Blush. Cringe.

    Let me fix that :)

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