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Louise Erdrich Quotes

Quotes tagged as "louise-erdrich" Showing 1-12 of 12
Louise Erdrich
“Power dies, power goes under and gutters out, ungraspable. It is momentary, quick of flight and liable to deceive. As soon as you rely on the possession it is gone. Forget that it ever existed, and it returns. I never made the mistake of thinking that I owned my own strength, that was my secret. And so I never was alone in my failures. I was never to blame entirely when all was lost, when my desperate cures had no effect on the suffering of those I loved. For who can blame a man waiting, the doors open, the windows open, food offered, arms stretched wide? Who can blame him if the visitor does not arrive.”
Louise Erdrich

David Foster Wallace
“Statisticians report that television is watched over six hours a day in the average American household. I don't know any fiction writers who live in average American households. I suspect Louise Erdrich might. Actually I have never seen an average American household. Except on TV.”
David Foster Wallace, A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again: Essays and Arguments

Louise Erdrich
“The buffalo provided the fuel for fires that smoked their own meat.”
Louise Erdrich, Chickadee

Louise Erdrich
“This time, the rapids sent them through a dark tunnel that seemed timeless, blind, malevolent. A yawning throat of water.”
Louise Erdrich, The Porcupine Year

Louise Erdrich
“He wondered if he would ever see the inside of one of those houses whose great windows blared sheaves of light. They made huge blurred spears that reached out into the balmy spring darkness.”
Louise Erdrich, Chickadee

Louise Erdrich
“Although she lived in town, Old Tallow was so isolated by the force and strangeness of her personality that she could have been surrounded by a huge dark forest. She had never had any children, and each of her three husbands had slunk off in turn during the night, never to be seen again. Nobody knew exactly what it was that Tallow, in her younger days, had done to drive them off. It had probably been something terrible. After the last husband left, her face seemed to have gotten old suddenly, though the rest of her hadn’t weakened. She was a rangy woman over six feet in height. She was powerful, lean, and lived surrounded by ferocious animals more wolf than dog.”
Louise Erdrich, The Birchbark House

Louise Erdrich
“Each of Old Tallow’s feet seemed to take up as much space as a small child, but Omakayas didn’t mind. Warily, but completely, she loved the fierce old woman.”
Louise Erdrich, The Game of Silence

Louise Erdrich
“She told the holy stories and the funny stories, the aadizookaanag that explained how the world came into being, how it continued to be made.”
Louise Erdrich, The Game of Silence

Louise Erdrich
“The prairie almost seemed to mock them with its beauty. Every inch of their skin was covered with bites upon bites. Their faces were purple and swollen. The mosquitoes bit through cloth, they bit through hair, they were implacable. Every being suffered. Yet they kept moving.”
Louise Erdrich, Chickadee

Louise Erdrich
“Life had sprung up along the trail. The thin film of green in the trees had become a cloud of new leaves. Robins, bluebirds, vireos, finches, songbirds of all types made the brush along the trail a wall of sharp melody.”
Louise Erdrich, Chickadee

Louise Erdrich
“Animikiins used all his skills. But the earth is good at swallowing up all traces of people. At last, in spite Animikiins's great powers, they lost his trail.”
Louise Erdrich, Chickadee

Louise Erdrich
“She just said nothing. Nothing. She let the silence between them fill the air. Unlike other people, Omakayas had noticed, silence did not make Old Tallow uncomfortable.

Now the warrior lady simply stood and smoked her pipe. The smoke drifted serenely in wavering fangs from each corner of her mouth. She was thinking.”
Louise Erdrich, The Game of Silence