The Painted Drum
by Louise ErdrichSign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 886)
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Erdrich is a remarkable historian, storyteller, poet... A magical concept, the inheritance of history through place, time, and objects is powerful and also telling of Erdrich's personal experience as a Native American woman. The book also places importance on female geneology, a common theme in many of her books. Each sentence and moment is stark and revealing, much like her poetry, movement and beauty flow from her fingertips.
Erdrich is a remarkable historian, storyteller, poet... A magical concept, the inheritance of history through place, time, and objects is powerful and also telling of Erdrich's personal experience as a Native American woman. The book also places importance on female geneology, a common theme in many of her books. Each sentence and moment is stark and revealing, much like her poetry, movement and beauty flow from her fingertips.
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Read in March, 2008
My experience with this book proves that checking out books from the library is a good thing. About three years ago I bought this book and went to a Louise Erdrich book signing and got it signed. I wanted to read it then but put it on my bookshelf in my apartment. If I checked it out from the library I would of read it right away in fear of the due date. I heard of Erdrich's upcoming book 'Plague of Doves' and fetched this book of my shelf to get my fill.
This was a very good book, and did not ...more
This was a very good book, and did not ...more
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Read in March, 2008
The Painted Drum is lyrical and complex in the way that Louise Erdrich's writing tends to be. It's a lovely and magical story on Ojibwe traditions and their intersection with the modern world and the inevitable complexity of colonization. In general, I am drawn to Erdrich's novels, and I liked this one well enough, though I don't think it's one of her best, mostly because the narrative does not hang together as cohesively as I would like. As is typical of Erdrich, there are many characters in...more
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Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in March, 2008
recommends it for:
anyone interested in Native American culture
Although I debated between giving the book 3 or 4 stars, I really enjoyed it. It's a connection of four stories with the commonality of the painted drum. The story that was most intriguing to me was the first story. The main character discovers and connects with an old drum. However, the only way she can possess it is to steal it, something that she would never do. I too love old things, old things that were important to other people even if in just an ordinary way. I've thought a lot about this...more
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This is a very deeply moving addition to Louise Erdrich's series of interwoven novels. In fact, in this one several stories set in different periods of history are intertwined. The main story concerns Faye Travers, who lives with her mother and runs a successful business organizing and selling the possessions of deceased folks. When she goes to review the estate of a neighbor, she finds a huge old painted ceremonial drum, which she can't resist taking home with her. Immediately, she begins to be...more
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Read in October, 2007
Why did it take me so long to read this book? I really had a hard time getting into it... the beginning seemed slow and I wasn't sure what to make of the characters, so I kept reading a few pages and then putting it down and reading something else. But I kept returning and about half way through the book I really became engaged with the characters. I loved the story of the drum and how it came to be and the lives it touched.
Now I'm recalling that I often have trouble with Erdrich's book...more
Now I'm recalling that I often have trouble with Erdrich's book...more
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recommends it for:
Alicia
This book stayed with me long after I was finished. Its historical and tells a story of a Native American Family's interwoven past and present. I felt the magic of the land and the people who roamed it for centuries. I felt emotionaly bound to the story.
It starts out on a winding road and the story winds around the lives of a present day family and its ancestors and how everything that was ever done by each family member in centuries past would lead to their decendents and dictate their lives ...more
It starts out on a winding road and the story winds around the lives of a present day family and its ancestors and how everything that was ever done by each family member in centuries past would lead to their decendents and dictate their lives ...more
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bookshelves:
chicklit,
fiction
Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
women interested in Native American stories
I enjoyed reading this book. Each section is good; a couple of sections are from the perspective of a woman who helps clean out houses after the owners die and auctions off the antiques in New Hampshire. Her mother is Ojibwe, although they never lived in North Dakota or on the reservation. Other sections do take place on the reservation: the history of the painted drum (and how it ended up in New Hampshire) placed in a family history, and another family's story involving the drum. Each secti...more
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bookshelves:
audiobooks
Read in May, 2008
A soap-box or a soap-opera? The author couldn't decide, why should I... Switching narrators in various parts added a lot to this long, garrulous tale, but the inconsistency of the characters themselves detracts whatever gain that might be. As an example, the main character is described as not paying attention to hunting seasons at one point, only to later pontificate on the importance of always knowing when hunting season is due to the deluge of suburban hunters who shoot anything in white (th...more
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Read in January, 2008
recommends it for:
lovers of kingsolver
I have the same sentiment as one of the other reviewers. I am having a hard time getting into it. The story seems to be unraveling fairly slow, but then again most good books do. I really enjoyed this book. It did start out fairly slowly especially considering that I didn't like Krahe's character, but towards the middle of the book, Erdrich leaves behind the main characters at the beginning to delve into the mythical history of the painted drum and that is where the story takes a turn for the...more
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reviewed
Read in February, 2007
This story is about several generations of Ojibwe Indians and is an interesting psychological study of how parents’ problems can get passed on to their children and their children and their children. I didn’t so much buy the mystical allusions about the drum itself. Some terribly sad and horrifying things happen to children in this story. I wanted to love this book as I generally love fiction and non-fiction books about Native Americans. But I had a few problems with the fairy tale style of ...more
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Read in October, 2008
recommends it for:
Katie
Delicate and intricate and robust and beautiful... I was engrossed in this book all the way through. It was a little startling when there was suddenly a new P.O.V. character, but I was able to ride that and make sense of things again. It's really good, and worthy of further analysis, as Louise Erdrich usually is.
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About the return of a Native American drum to it's rightful place in the world.
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Read in September, 2008
recommended to Andrea by:
Bryn Mawr List
This book was really three books in one, with distinct voices in each. The most lyrical is Faye's story, though the tidy little romance detracted significantly from my overall enjoyment of her tale. The most compelling is the story of the making of the drum. And the most pedestrian is the story that brings the drum back to life. I'm curious to read more by this author, to see which style is really hers.
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Read in January, 2004
"Life will break you. Nobody can protect you from that, and living alone won't either, for solitude will also break you with its yearning. You have to love. You have to feel. It is the reason you are here on earth. You are here to risk your heart. You are here to be swallowed up. And when it happens that you are broken, or betrayed, or left, or hurt, or death brushes near, let yourself sit by an apple tree and listen to the apples falling all around you in heaps, wasting their sweetness. Te...more
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Read in September, 2007
Interesting characters and good writing, but I just wasn't that interested in the subject matter. "Indian Hoo-Hah," as I like to say, just ain't my bag baby.
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Read in August, 2008
It was ok. But even though the plight of the Native Americans was heartbreaking, the book didn't let me feel it on a personal, human level. It kept me detached from the characters. Very much an observer. An outsider. Even purely human matters such as life and death, finding your place in the world, forgiveness, etc. were presented in such a way that, although you could understand them, and feel sad, the book made it all feel clinical and far away, so the reader could not really empathize.
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