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The Lone Ranger And Tonto Fistfight In Heaven
Sherman Alexie

The Lone Ranger And Tonto Fistfight In Heaven

Atlantic Monthly Pr (Sep 01, 1993)
9780871135483
| Book - Hardcover
223 pages | 150 x 239 mm | English
$ 21.00 | Value: $ 21.00
Dewey 813/.54
LC Classification PS3551.L35774 .L66 1993
LC Control No. 93021780

Genre

  • Feminism and Women's Studies

Subject

  • Native Women (FEM-NA)

Plot

In this darkly comic short story collection, Sherman Alexie, a Spokane/Coeur d'Alene Indian, brilliantly weaves memory, fantasy, and stark realism to paint a complex, grimly ironic portrait of life in and around the Spokane Indian Reservation. These twenty-two interlinked tales are narrated by characters raised on humiliation and government-issue cheese, and yet are filled with passion and affection, myth and dream. There is Victor, who as a nine-year-old crawled between his unconscious parents hoping that the alcohol seeping through their skins might help him sleep, Thomas Builds-the-Fire, who tells his stories long after people stop listening, and Jimmy Many Horses, dying of cancer, who writes letters on stationary that reads "From the Death Bed of Jimmy Many Horses III," even though he actually writes then on his kitchen table. Against a backdrop of alcohol, car accidents, laughter, and basketball, Alexie depicts the distances between Indians and whites, reservation Indians and urban Indians, men and women, and mostly poetically between modern Indians and the traditions of the past.