The Ghost Dancers

Available
Product Details
Price
$28.00  $26.04
Publisher
University of Nevada Press
Publish Date
Pages
264
Dimensions
5.7 X 8.6 X 1.1 inches | 1.05 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781647790240

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About the Author
Adrian C. Louis (1946-2018) was a half-breed member of the Lovelock Paiute Tribe. He published over a dozen collections of poetry (including two with the University of Nevada Press), a collection of short stories (Wild Indians and Other Creatures, University of Nevada Press), and another novel, Skins, which was made into a movie. His work has been translated into French, Hungarian, and other languages. Louis is remembered for his aggressive refusal to romanticize life on or off the reservation.
Reviews
"[H]e has Brailed the cataclysmic shifts in our culture, the deadly divide over race and status, and the insidious station of this country's first people for 40 years. To say he is the finest writer to have come out of Nevada is an understatement. He is a poet for this generation, but more important, he is of this time and the time before this when the reservation was a coffin to his people. He bleeds these things into his work. He is larger than the page." --Shaun T. Griffin, rjmagazine

"The Ghost Dancers is a grim, uncompromising novel in which a Native American family deals with the crushing effects of generations of colonialism." --Foreword Reviews

"Adrian C. Louis's The Ghost Dancers is like so much of Louis's work: gritty, mean, and wonderfully honest. It's true that for the contemporary audience, this novel is a shocker--but there is a tenderness to Louis's work if one is able to see that Louis desperately wanted a true-to-life portrait of Native existence in the literature, one that you so rarely see, and that, through all of its warts, Louis loved fiercely."
--Erika Wurth, author of Buckskin Cocaine

"Adrian Louis has written a profane, hilarious, violent, and brutal novel. Instead of Dark Noir, let's call it Red Noir. It's like Raymond Chandler and Kurt Vonnegut had an Indian baby boy who grew up to be a wild poet and novelist. This book will get some people angry because it doesn't fit in today's safe and sane literary world. But that's the point. Adrian didn't want to belong. He was an outsider and he was half-crazy. And he writes about Indians that all of us half-crazy Indians recognize: the damaged men and women who live at the margins and are fighting to win some damn dignity in a country designed to murder our souls. This book, however unfinished, is a testament to Adrian's courage, originality, and hard-earned empathy."
--Sherman Alexie, PEN Faulkner and National Book Award winner, Spokane/Coeur d'Alene Indian author whose latest book is You Don't Have to Say You Love Me, a memoir

"This is a novel of unkind sentiment--the colonizer will run; the reviewer will ask for permission to create a blemish of words that tries to substantiate the grief within. But there will not be a way to absorb the novel except to sit with it. It will smolder its way into the reader and leave you there, no solutions, no resolution save the hardened torment of what's just outside the trailer."
--Shaun Griffin, author of Because the Light Will Not Forgive Me and Anthem for a Burnished Land