The nominee that
disorients, devastates, and entirely delivers.
The roundtable’s
fifth presenter, Jim
Donahue of SUNY Potsdam, nominated James Welch’s Fool’s
Crow. If Invisible Man is a
famous American novel that (I believe) few Americans have actually read, Fool’s Crow is an almost criminally unknown
novel that, Jim compellingly argued, we should all read. For one thing, Jim
reminded us, the novel dramatizes the events surrounding one of the most
under-remembered (including, I’m ashamed to admit, by me) crucial American events:
the 1870 Marias River
Massacre. But even beyond such vital historical contexts, Fool’s Crow’s unique form produces two
distinct and equally important effects on its readers.
I’ve written in
this space about Karl
Jacoby’s amazing Shadows at Dawn,
and specifically about Jacoby’s multi-vocal and –perspectival structure. Welch’s
novel is similarly structured, moving through sections focalized entirely
through the voice, perspective, and worldview of both Blackfoot and European
American characters. Yet while Jacoby’s work of nonfiction has its historian “narrator”
to guide readers through those sections, Welch throws us into each perspective
with no guidance—leaving non-English words untranslated, introducing specific
and uncontextualized place and character names, and so on. For non-native (perhaps
even non-Blackfoot) readers, the effect is profoundly disorienting, forcing us
to do what Jim called the “cognitive work” of trying to understand this
distinct perspective.
So on the one
hand, to echo the end of yesterday’s post, Welch’s novel would fall squarely onto
the “challenging” end of the spectrum. Yet on the other, as Jim argued and as I
would agree, Fool’s Crow is one of
the most beautifully written novels of the last few decades (and then some).
And when it comes to considering works for a National Big Read, it’s difficult
to overstate how important such aesthetic power could be—after all, if we want
to introduce Americans to historical significance and cultural diversity we
could give them Jacoby’s book (and that’d be great); but if we want to
demonstrate the value and pleasure of reading itself, what it can do to us, I
don’t know of any books that would hit us more than Fool’s Crow.
Final nominee
tomorrow,
Ben
PS.
Thoughts on this nomination? Other nominees for an Even Bigger Read?
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