This revised and expanded edition of Beidler and Barton’s indispensable A Reader’s Guide to the Novels of Louise Erdrich builds on the sellout success of the first edition. Every serious reader of Erdrich’s fiction will want access to this comprehensive new edition, which includes valuable new material.
• Completely updated with information on four new novels published since the first The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse, The Master Butchers Singing Club, Four Souls, and The Painted Drum
• Easy-to-use genealogical charts for the various families
• A map and geographical details about the settings for the novels
• A detailed composite dictionary of characters (even including the minor characters)
• A glossary of all of the Ojibwe words, phrases, and sentences that Erdrich, an astoundingly versatile and energetic Native American author, uses in her panoply of novels
There have been times when I am completely lost in the family tree of Louise Erdrich's books. This book, though older, helps enormously. It tracks which character appears where in which books and how they are related to everyone else. I wish I had one of these for real life.
Great help in sorting out people and places in the saga. See my review of Tracks A vademecum for Erdrich readers. Realized hours after posting this review that I'd not mentioned the revised Guide does not cover books published after 2006, including my three favorites of the author's viz. LaRose; The Round House and The Plague of Doves. l of these I read in 2016. LaRose was the second of her books for me, several years after The Master Butchers Singing Club. I recommend LaRose to anyone as the first Erdrich book to read. Though it is her latest one and takes place quite recently, it has flashbacks that capture generations.
This guide has been so helpful especially since Love Medicine series is one that relies HEAVILY on characterization andthe characters in all of Erdrich's books are quite complex especially relationship wise.
This guide was a big help in understanding the first six novels Louise Erdrich wrote. It covered her novels through The Antelope Wife but not Antelope Woman, written 18 years after the original story.
It provided sections for each novel on geography, chronology, and genealogical trees that made it much easier to keep track of all the different characters, their offspring and interrelationships. It also included a dictionary of every main characters and less information on minor figures.
By being careful as a reader, it was possible to use the information as I read through the novels without spoiling upcoming plot turns.
I would say that this was a very valuable tool in seeing where the stories were going and what was happening to her characters.