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Interest-specific online venues will often provide a book buying opportunity. Click here for a list of interest-specific sites grouped by category. If you are located outside the U. From New York Times bestselling author Louise Erdrich comes a haunting novel that continues the rich and enthralling Ojibwe saga begun in her novel Tracks. But revenge is never simple, and her intentions are complicated by her dangerous compassion for the man who wronged her. Thanks for signing up! We've emailed you instructions for claiming your free e-book.
Tell us more about what you like to read so we can send you the best offers and opportunities. By submitting your email address, you understand that you will receive email communications from Bookperk and other HarperCollins services. You may unsubscribe from these email communications at any time. To read e-books on the BookShout App , download it on: Bookshout App We have partnered with Bookshout and recommend using their app as a simple way to read our e-books. The Blue Jay's Dance, a memoir of motherhood, was her first nonfiction work, and her children's book, Grandmother's Pigeon, has been published by Hyperion Press.
She lives in Minnesota with her children, who help her run a small independent bookstore called The Birchbark. Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read. Want to Read saving…. Want to Read Currently Reading Read. Refresh and try again. Open Preview See a Problem? Thanks for telling us about the problem. Return to Book Page. Preview — Four Souls by Louise Erdrich. This small but incredibly rich chapter in Erdrich's ongoing Native American saga is a continuation of the story of the enigmatic Fleur Pillager, begun in Tracks Four Souls begins with Fleur Pillager's journey from North Dakota to Minneapolis, where she plans to avenge the loss of her family's land to a white man.
After a dream vision that gives her a powerful new na This small but incredibly rich chapter in Erdrich's ongoing Native American saga is a continuation of the story of the enigmatic Fleur Pillager, begun in Tracks After a dream vision that gives her a powerful new name, Four Souls, she enters the household of John James Mauser.
A man notorious for his wealth and his mansion on a hill, Mauser became rich by deceiving young Indian women and taking possession of their ancestral lands. What promises to be a straightforward tale of revenge, however, slowly metamorphoses into a more complex evocation of human nature.
The story of anger and retribution that begins in Tracks becomes a story of healing and love in Four Souls. Paperback , pages. Published August 29th by Harper Perennial first published June 22nd To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up. To ask other readers questions about Four Souls , please sign up. Stephen According to Beidler and Barton Reader's Guide to the Novels of Louise Erdrich, the main action begins in or around on the un-named reservation …more According to Beidler and Barton Reader's Guide to the Novels of Louise Erdrich, the main action begins in or around on the un-named reservation and ends back on the reservation around Minneapolis is the setting in the interval.
A back story begins, says the Guide, around , when Anaquot AKA Four Souls survives what seems a fatal illness thanks to her mother's healing powers. Anaquot when she grows up will be the mother of Fleur Pillager less. See 1 question about Four Souls…. Lists with This Book. Oct 04, Rod rated it really liked it Shelves: First of this review is basically of everything Louise Erdrich has written. This book is amazing and its spiral, we'll-get-there-when-we-get-there method of storytelling is storytelling at its best.
Let me just end this review with a booklover's highest praise- after reading this book i went to the library and checked out everything by this auther and have now read half of her books. So far none of them have disappointed. They don't have to be read in order, but if I did it over I would go in or First of this review is basically of everything Louise Erdrich has written. They don't have to be read in order, but if I did it over I would go in order the books are written.
Every one of her books build on each other. This woman is a genius and a national treasure. View all 7 comments.
Sep 03, Jennifer aka EM rated it it was amazing. This is a story of revenge. Anger and bitterness tempered by love. When everything fails, when everything is lost there is still love. Only Erdrich writes this way Describing earthy vulgarities and cruelties in poetry. The last couple of pages are filled with lyricism summarizing individual and cultural loss so perfectly, with such pain and grace. Long live Louise Erdri This is a story of revenge.
Long live Louise Erdrich. What a vision, what voices. View all 3 comments. Jun 28, Neal Adolph rated it liked it Shelves: A few weeks ago I had the pleasure of finishing another novel by Louise Erdrich. Sadly, I am only just now getting a chance to sit down and work through the wizardry of her work. As expected, I am coming away with a good deal more admiration for her work. Erdrich, I think I have said elsewhere, is one of my favourite writers, and the collection of personalities and timelines and events that she has made in her large number of interconnecting works is nothing short of incredibly impressive.
This b A few weeks ago I had the pleasure of finishing another novel by Louise Erdrich. This book, though, falls a little short of the standard that I have come to expect from her. On display are all of the things I like about her. An impressive mixing of all sorts of different cultural traditions, each of which handled honourably. Unexpected romances and storylines which each bring to mind old storylines from older books and open up new ones for future books. A not too heavy moral hand, but a good awareness of morality.
A great sense of humour. And we even get to see more of two or three of my favourite characters. Fleur, that mysterious and powerful figure who survives in the universe with an inexplicable and unique strength, honour, and motivation. Nanapush, who is a source of incredible wisdom and remarkable hilarity coming out of his unusual worldview. And his not-quite-wife, Margaret, who, when we finally gets the chance to narrate a chapter narrates it beautifully. Only a central character. We have no sense of how she actually sees the world, only how others see her and her interactions with the world.
And the way they understand her is not in the way that we would expect somebody to be understood in literature - a paragraph or two of descriptions which try to capture this very-human figure into a few simple words. No, this is a person we only get to understand, almost understand, by a bundle of stories about her past and her present. Nobody really tries to describe her in any comprehensive way. She, like all humans, is beyond that kind of explanation. She is, without a doubt, the central figure and the driving force for the plotline.
Literary folks would call her the antagonist. The book follows her move from the reserve where she has lived her life and watched the forest of her people be destroyed by greedy white men to the nearby and bustling little city of St. She went with the intention of killing him and, in time, heals him from an ailment, marries him, and then has a child with him. It is a mesmerizing dance that she does, and it ends with a beautiful bundle of moments - the sort that we read Erdrich for.
That could in part be blamed on its length - it is shorter by a good couple hundred pages - but it is definitely crutching on some of the other books that she had already written. Most notably Tracks, as far as I know, but perhaps others. I know this book will make more sense as I read more of her work. Nonetheless, it was a bit of a letdown.
Start by marking “Four Souls” as Want to Read: This small but incredibly rich chapter in Erdrich's ongoing Native American saga is a continuation of the story of the enigmatic Fleur Pillager, begun in Tracks (). Four Souls begins with Fleur Pillager's journey from North. Four Souls: A Novel Paperback – July 5, From New York Times bestselling author Louise Erdrich comes a haunting novel that continues the rich and enthralling Ojibwe saga begun in her novel Tracks. After taking her mother’s name, Four Souls, for strength, the strange and.
For what it is worth, you also see something of her best writing here, with her prose adding to the mystical and inexplicable nature of her plots and ideas. Ask me about it if you are interested at all, because I would love to have a discussion about this part of her work. Speaking of her work more generally, not long after finishing Four Souls and marvelling in those last 50 glorious pages thank you Margaret , I think I have come to the conclusion that the central theme of her book is reconciliation with the self, renewal, rebirth. Which is lovely to read and watch, in this book as much as anywhere else.
If only the journal to that point was a bit more developed. Recommended, but not as your first step into Erdrich. She is better and more complete elsewhere. Aug 21, Chloe rated it it was amazing Shelves: Of all the stories that have been told on this little globe we inhabit, there are few tales that entice me more than stories of revenge and retribution. I'm not talking the brooding tales of violent stoic men pushed beyond their limit by an underworld that destroys their single shot at happiness, but vengeance that takes plotting, manipulation and, most importantly, patience.
While there's always room for a grim-faced avenger tossing murderous thugs through plate glass windows, the revenge stori Of all the stories that have been told on this little globe we inhabit, there are few tales that entice me more than stories of revenge and retribution. While there's always room for a grim-faced avenger tossing murderous thugs through plate glass windows, the revenge stories that grip me are those who play the long game. I like anger that burns cold and steady instead of flaring out in a furious moment of cathartic rage.
I like protagonists who keep the fires of their anger stoked low and steady, feeding them slowly and setting the scene just so before claiming their personal justice. Such a protagonist is Fleur Pillager. Last of her proud line, the sole survivor of a smallpox outbreak when she was a small child, the final remaining tie she has to her family and her heritage is the land that had been left to her, vast acres of pristine untouched forests and an island in the center of a lake said to house the unsettled spirits of her bloodline. Having lost this land to a rapacious timber baron at the conclusion of Erdrich's Tracks , Fleur has abandoned her daughter to the care of the state-run Indian schools meant to westernize and "civilize" indigenous youths, secretly taken the name of Four Souls after her mother, and trudged down the railroad line from her North Dakota reservation to bustling early 20th century Minneapolis in order to track down and claim vengeance upon the white man who has pillaged and destroyed her land, the fiend John James Mauser.
When she arrives and surreptiously takes a job as a laundress in Mauser's mansion she discovers that the unrepentant monster that she has come to do battle with is none too intimidating in person. Wracked by an unnamed ailment, which we now to be PTSD, acquired while serving in France during the Great War, the Mauser she finds strapped into his sweat-soaked bed is a shade, a convalescent gripped by fierce muscle spasms and ceaseless insomnia. There's no satisfaction in murdering a helpless invalid, so Fleur takes it upon herself to restore Mauser to health and vitality, winning his heart in the process and weaving a far more convoluted revenge than the simple assassination she had originally planned.
Plunging ahead with the tenacity and strength that had made the Pillagers both feared and respected, Fleur finds that, even when in service to a righteous cause, anger has its consequences and the actions taken in its name will change not only those involved but will reverberate across generations. This tale is not simply Fleur's, however. In between narrating bits of Fleur's story, the lovable rascal Nanapush finds time to continue his own misbegotten adventures.
Whether it be seeking his own brand of vengeance on a neighbor who has been a lifelong adversary, tormenting his long-suffering partner Margaret Kashpaw who is quite adept at giving as much grief as she receives , or seeking to preserve the borders of the Ojibwe reservation from death by a thousand bureaucratic papercuts. Sagacious and buffoonish, often simultaneously, Nanapush proves once again why he is one of my all-time favorite fictional characters in a cringingly hilarious scene wherein he finds himself drunk in front of the entire tribe, wearing his wife's newly-made medicine dress, using every shred of his wit and loquaciousness to save both the lands of his people and his own honor.
This is the third Erdrich book I've devoured in the past year and with every page I turned the esteem I hold for her increased. With a loose and digressive narrative style that fosters perfectly the notion that the reader is sitting at the storyteller's feet as she weaves the tale, it is all too easy to fall deep into her words and lose all awareness of the world passing around you. While a sequel-of-sorts to Tracks , each book reads just as well as a stand-alone novel and one need not be familiar with any of the preceding events in order to become immersed in Erdrich's captivating storytelling, though once you finish you may find yourself running to your library to pick up her other books.
Politically speaking, I weed out bigotry. Narratologically speaking, I weed out tropes, especially the ones that take reality and normalize the points that bend and break and bleed the i 3. Narratologically speaking, I weed out tropes, especially the ones that take reality and normalize the points that bend and break and bleed the individuals who do not fit, and there is no one identity that renders said identified immune to committing such actions.
Louise Erdrich has created a fictional Ojibwe Indian reservation somewhere in North Dakota populated by a cast of complex characters who we meet again and again as the threads of their stories are woven into a series of interconnected novels that take place over a wide span of years. It started as a native American women from a reservation in Minnesota traveled to the city to seek revenge upon a timber baron who stole and ruined her land. The problem is, it can be difficult to know where to start in order to read them in chronological order. Halfway through the novel, he shifts to the tale of his own revenge plans against a "special foe," an old rival for his wife's affections whom he's tried to kill many times. In a larger context, however, transvestism generates meanings that are central to Erdrich's work.
That's intersectionality for you, and it's as much of a bitch as it deconstructs the continued existence of that delightfully apt yet horrifically spacegoating phrase. Like other books I've read in my continued project of rearranging my most read authors, this reading was constantly stalked by Tracks , its chronological predecessor in my reading history. Thanks to it, I expected certain things: I got bits and pieces of it all, including a hint of housebound gothic that I would love to write a paper about, but ultimately, two tropes interfered with this: I see the revenge plot, and the healing, and all the bloody and death defying things that are done to fulfill both the killing and the life of such phrases while the slow sordid beast of colonialism rolls on courthouses and country yards, but when all of this hinges on turning points of dehumanization, its leaves me wondering what the point of a revenge plot is if it spawns an endless wave of justified massacre in its wake.
This last few weeks or so have been a tad monotonous with all the attention I've been paying to solely those I've encountered before, so I'm switching gears to chase down the unread of whom I own copies of variegated works. I'm hoping this'll help with my reception down the line of those I've encountered before, as it seems that my past insistence of never sticking with an author for more than one book within a five year span had its logic amidst its guise of a habit.
I don't have any other books by Erdrich on hand, but that's what lightning strike inspiration and library sales are for. Smallpox ravaged us quick, tuberculosis killed us slow, liquor made us , religion meddled with our souls, but the bureaucrats did the worst and finally bored us to death. Dec 31, Trisha rated it it was amazing Shelves: Louise Erdrich has created a fictional Ojibwe Indian reservation somewhere in North Dakota populated by a cast of complex characters who we meet again and again as the threads of their stories are woven into a series of interconnected novels that take place over a wide span of years.
The problem is, it can be difficult to know where to start in order to read them in chronological order. But this is one of the things I find so fascinating about these books — the fact that they take me into a different world where part of it seems foreign and even a bit magical to me even though it is firmly grounded in the reality of Native American life and culture.
Louise Erdrich writes with great power about her Ojibwe heritage and way of life. Four Souls picks up roughly where Tracks left off sometime in the late twenties. Having lost the land that belonged to her on the reservation, Fleur Pillager sets off in pursuit of the lumber baron who stole it in order wreak her revenge.
The novel is a haunting reflection on what he has seen there.
Four Souls is the most straightforward narrative I have read to date. It was that my ears were opened to hear all I missed when I was arrayed like a man. Let the dress save you. Louise Erdrich, you feed my soul. Mar 07, Elizabeth Alaska rated it really liked it Shelves: Yet another fine novel from Louise Erdrich. Her novels are not exactly a series, but the characters do repeat. This one especially is better enjoyed if at least a few of the earlier ones are read first. Though not required, reading The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse gives some background that the reader would appreciate having.
There are 3 narrators: Nanapush, Emily Elizabeth, and Margaret. Margaret has only a couple of chapters toward the end, but she fills in admirably some of t Yet another fine novel from Louise Erdrich. Margaret has only a couple of chapters toward the end, but she fills in admirably some of the narrative from Nanapush. He has such a loving heart, hopes to do the best in all things, and is such a goofball. He provided some laugh out loud moments. Without Emily Elizabeth, the story might not have been told - at least not this story.
This will not be my favorite Erdrich, but that is only because I have enjoyed some of the others so much. Oct 14, Maggie K rated it really liked it Shelves: I really love Erdrich's writing In this installation of her related novels With narration added by Nanpush the old fool I love his dialogue She threw out one soul and it came back hungry. With the fascination I have for Louise Erdrich and the reservation world she has created in her work, I am most probably a biased reader.
There simply isn't a book of Erdrich's I haven't enjoyed and loved so far. For those who've read Four Souls without reading any of her earlier books, it might be hard to understand what the fuss is all about. For those who have already read some of her previous work especially Tracks this book might resonate ver She threw out one soul and it came back hungry. For those who have already read some of her previous work especially Tracks this book might resonate very strongly. If you would like to start reading her novels now, I can only recommend to start at the beginning so you can fully enjoy this Ojibwe world.
Four Souls is the continuation of Fleur Pillager's story from where it was last left off in Tracks.
After losing her land and after all the trees on it have been cut down, Fleur picks up the bones of her ancestors, changes her name to Four Souls her mother's spirit name , and goes out into the city to seek revenge. The book merits and builds up on the stories of other characters as well - Nanapush, Margaret Kashpaw, and Polly Elizabeth are all part of the narration, and with their own personal stories they help build up Fleur's tale of loss, revenge, and acceptance. What always hits home for me in Erdrich's writing is her ability to narrate two or three separate stories, which usually seem not to have any connection with each other at all.
Like the loose ends of different colored threads while weaving a carpet - one goes this way, another goes that way, until in the end they meet and create a perfect pattern.
This is also true for all of her novels - taken separately they each go in a different direction, but together they are all connected and show a perfect world full of people and the connections between them. In her work, Louise Erdrich has created an array of characters and places you get to know better and better when reading her work. After meeting with them so many times in so many of her novels, I've grown to know them and become fond of them. Nanapush with his constant tricks, jokes, and jealousy. Mary Kashpaw with her quick temper and religiousness.
Fleur with her knowledge of the spirit world, quiet and observant personality, and love for gambling. I feel as if they are real people I've always known, with their own personality and character. With Fleur being my favorite one, I was more than thrilled to see how her story continues and what happens to her after losing her land, and I must say that in showing me that, Four Souls took me through anger, sadness, and acceptance.
This was a brilliantly narrated story as always , told with an incredible understanding of the soul. Of all four souls. Mar 14, Allie Riley rated it really liked it. I thoroughly enjoyed reading "The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse" by the same author, as my review of that novel demonstrates. I enjoyed it so much, in fact, that I was unaware that I was missing anything. Until it was pointed out by the existence of this, her next novel.
It follows the story of Fleur Pillager and what happened to her when she left the reservation for the city, seeking out the man who stole her land. She may have set out intent on revenge, but what happens is per I thoroughly enjoyed reading "The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse" by the same author, as my review of that novel demonstrates. She may have set out intent on revenge, but what happens is perhaps more satisfying and better for her. Once more the writing and the characters shine.
Once more there is poetry, magic and humour. I was thoroughly absorbed in this wonderful story and can't wait to read yet more of Erdrich's work. Jul 01, Morgan rated it it was amazing. The first novel I've read by Louise Erdrich and won't be the last. It retains its poetry, subtlety and profound beauty within a clear-sighted and readily comprehensible narrative. I can't recommend it enough. It reminded me of Marquez at his very best. There were times we hated who we are, and who we had to become, in order not to follow those we loved into the next world. We became impenetrable, sparing of our pity.
Sorrows that leveled other people were small to us. We made no move to avoid pain. Sometimes we even welcomed it — we were clumsy with knives, fire, boiling water, steel traps. Pain took our minds off the greater pain that was the mistake that we still existed.
Therefore, although I went to school I was not harmed, nor while I was there did I forget my language. I tamped it down. I took it in.
I grew hard inside so that the girl named Center of the Sky could survive. My husband outwitted death by talking. Only when his talk was comical, kind, and obscene, mine was cutting and angry. Now we are different. We print ourselves deeply on the earth. The ruts and skids of our wheels bite deep and the bush recedes. We make foundations for our buildings and sink wells beside our houses. Our shoes are hard and where we go it is easy to follow. I have left my own tracks, too. I have left behind these words.