Lise Erdrich

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Lise Erdrich

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Historical Exhibit # 1

I spent the last week of February as writer-in-residence at the College of St. Catherine, the largest college for women in the United States. The invite came via Associated Colleges of the Twin Cities Creative Writing Programs Spring Readings 2009. Kind remarks were received yesterday from students of professor Susan Welch, along with a charitable report from Treza Rosado at The Wheel. The student Read more of this blog post »
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Published on May 17, 2009 12:06
Average rating: 3.92 · 225 ratings · 46 reviews · 3 distinct worksSimilar authors
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Night Train

3.71 avg rating — 55 ratings — published 2008 — 3 editions
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Bears Make Rock Soup: And O...

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3.69 avg rating — 29 ratings — published 2002 — 5 editions
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Reading with Style: This topic has been closed to new comments. SP 2016 20.6 The Bronte Sisters 162 54 May 23, 2016 02:44AM  
William Faulkner
“With the gun which was too big for him, the breech-loader which did not even belong to him but to Major de Spain and which he had fired only once, at a stump on the first day to learn the recoil and how to reload it with the paper shells, he stood against a big gum tree beside a little bayou whose black still water crept without motion out of a cane-brake, across a small clearing and into the cane again, where, invisible, a bird, the big woodpecker called Lord-to-God by negroes, clattered at a dead trunk. It was a stand like any other stand, dissimilar only in incidentals to the one where he had stood each morning for two weeks; a territory new to him yet no less familiar than that other one which after two weeks he had come to believe he knew a little--the same solitude, the same loneliness through which frail and timorous man had merely passed without altering it, leaving no mark nor scar, which looked exactly as it must have looked when the first ancestor of Sam fathers' Chickasaw predecessors crept into it and looked about him, club or stone axe or bone arrow drawn and ready, different only because, squatting at the edge of the kitchen, he had smelled the dogs huddled and cringing beneath it and saw the raked ear and side of the bitch that, as Sam had said, had to be brave once in order to keep on calling herself a dog, and saw yesterday in the earth beside the gutted log, the print of the living foot. He heard no dogs at all. He never did certainly hear them. He only heard the drumming of the woodpecker stop short off, and knew that the bear was looking at him. he did not move, holding the useless gun which he knew now he would never fire at it, now or ever, tasting in his saliva that taint of brass which he had smelled in the huddled dogs when he peered under the kitchen.”
William Faulkner, Go Down, Moses

Larry Woiwode
“Memory is a magpie after chips of colored glass and ribbon rather than the upright accuracy of objective sequence.”
Larry Woiwode

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message 1: by Kat (last edited Aug 25, 2016 02:18PM)

Kat fake strawberries?


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