Alexandra
Fuller: Quiet until the Thaw, 9780735223349, published June 27, 2017, hardback, Penguin
Press, Penguin Random House US
Alexandra
Fuller’s previous, mostly autobiographical work about her childhood and life in
Africa and her new life in Wyoming (Don’t lets go to the dogs tonight, Leaving before the rain comes, Cocktail Hour
under the Tree of Forgetfulness ) sit on my shelf of all time favorite books. They are brilliant studies of her family,
Africa and her new life in the US, colorful, honest and written with raw
Emotion. Her style of writing always paints a clear picture, I always had visual images in my head when
reading her books.
When I received the proof of her upcoming book
“Quiet until the Thaw”, I was warned that this is an altogether different book. Having read various Native American authors, literature I have been drawn to for years, I was immediately curious about this
new chapter of her writing. Alexandra
Fuller participated in a ride on horseback from Fort Robinson, Nebraska to the
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, a couple of hundred miles across
country. She ended up staying for months
feeling at home for the first time since leaving Africa.
“Quiet
until the Thaw” is set in Lakota Oglala Pine Ridge Indian Reservation and tells
the story of two cousins, You Choose Watson and Rick Overlooking Horse who were brought up together but could not be more different in character. The one has chosen the traditional
Native American path, the other has gone off the rails ending up in prison. The book is set in three parts, describing Rick’s
and You Choose Watson upbringing and the effect their life development has on
many people in the reservation. When Rick is eventually given two orphan boys to bring up,
Le-a Brings a Plenty, a colorful female character in the book, helps him
without hesitation to raise the children her womb was never able to produce.
You Choose Watson's return from prison and his actions change and disrupt their lives forever.
What makes this book fascinating is how it is set: very
short chapters, 3 pages mostly, told exquisitely in story snapshots,
thoughts, Indian mythology, ll blended together. Fuller’s storytelling is heavily inspired by the Native American tradition of telling stories. I loved
this little gem of a book, was drawn to it immediately. She is such a fine writer, it deserves to be compared with other masterful writers like Louise Erdrich. It is certainly helpful if the reader is interested in Native American literature but it is not a requirement.
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