“Here
I am, where I ought to be. A writer must have a place where he or she feels
this, a place to love and be irritated with.” – Louise Erdrich
Born on this date in 1954, Erdrich,
who is Ojibwe, was born as Karen Louise in Little Falls, MN (also the
birthplace of Charles Lindbergh).
Winner of the Library of Congress
Prize for American Fiction, Erdrich is widely acclaimed as one of our most
significant Native American writers and has won numerous awards for her work,
including the National Book Award for The
Round House in 2012. In 2009 she
was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for The
Plague of Doves. Erdrich’s novels create multiple
narratives in the same fictional area, combining the tapestry of local history
with current themes and modern consciousness.
In addition to her ongoing writing
ventures, she operates a well-known neighborhood bookstore in Minneapolis
called Birchbark Books, focusing primarily on Native American literature and
support for Native writers. And, both she and her sister Heid, a noted poet and
author in her own right, have been generous in sharing their writing expertise
– particularly on character development and “voice” – with all writers.
“By writing,” Erdrich said, “I can
live in ways that I could not survive.”
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