Tompkins County Public Library

Thursday, March 11, 2010

7. Shadow Tag by Louise Erdrich

Irene America is struggling in life. She is trying to complete her doctorate thesis about the painter George Catlin, while raising her family of three children, and dealing with her demanding, jealous, and possessive husband, Gil. Gil is somewhat famous for his increasingly raw and brutal portraits of Irene, and while he realizes that his wife doesn’t love him anymore, he cannot let her and their family go. Both Irene and Gil are alcoholics and their children are caught in the middle of constant fighting, hitting, and other abuses. When Irene realizes that Gil is reading her diary, she starts a new, hidden diary that she keeps locked in a bank deposit box where she writes her true feelings about her life and dissolving marriage, and manipulates her other diary writings to manipulate Gil into leaving her and their children.

While bleak and heartbreaking, Erdrich’s newest novel is also a gripping, emotional tale of a family gone wrong. Native American beliefs and culture are present throughout the short novel, as customary in most of Erdrich’s novels. Most readers probably will realize that someone is not going to make it out of the marriage alive, but the end is still shocking when readers finally get to that point. A tale of love, control, frustration, and survival make this a mesmerizing read.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

6. Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community? by Martin Luther King, Jr.

Written in 1967, when King isolated himself in Jamaica to focus on his writing, this is Martin Luther King, Jr.’s last book. Out of print for over ten years, it has been finally reissued by Beacon Press and will be part of a new King Legacy series that will re-print some of King’s books. Although often contained in compendiums, the book was frequently cut of two chapters, leaving readers without a true feeling for the book until now.

Some readers may struggle with the dated phrases and language in Where Do We Go from Here, but that is quickly overcome by the universal messages that continue to resonate today. Topics such as the rise of black power, the continuing struggle against racism, poverty, fair wages, protests against the Vietnam War (and war in general), and militarism, are just as relevant now as they were in 1967. While focusing on struggles, the book is also optimistic and hopeful for a better future for all.

Look for a community-wide discussion of this title this spring in the Ithaca Community. Copies will be distributed to local libraries, book discussion groups, organizations, churches, and more, so that our community can come together to learn from this important work.