LaRose | |
Author: | Louise Erdrich |
Cover Artist: | Aza Erdrich |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Genre: | Novel |
Publisher: | Harper |
Pub Date: | 10 May 2016 |
Media Type: | Print (Hardcover, Paperback) |
Pages: | 384 pp (First edition, hardcover) |
Isbn: | 0-06-227702-2 |
Oclc: | 918994415 |
Congress: | PS3555.R42 L37 2016 |
LaRose is a novel by the Ojibwe author Louise Erdrich, published in 2016 by HarperCollins.[1] The book received positive reviews from multiple publications, including The New York Times, The Kansas City Star,[2] Winnipeg Free Press,[3] The Philadelphia Inquirer,[4] The Washington Post,[5] The A.V. Club,[6] The Sydney Morning Herald,[7] USA Today,[8] and The Chronicle Herald.[9] It won the 2016 National Book Critics Circle Award in fiction. The novel features the same setting as Erdrich's 2012 novel The Round House.
LaRose is set in North Dakota on an Ojibwe reservation in the "era of George W. Bush and 9/11." The novel's protagonist is LaRose Iron, a young Native American boy. His father, Landreaux Iron, accidentally shoots LaRose's best friend and neighbor, Dusty Ravich, also 5 years old, in a hunting accident, when the buck Landreaux had aimed at suddenly moved from in front of the boy.
Dusty's parents, Peter and Nola, are devastated by his death. To compensate for their loss, following an ancient custom, LaRose's parents, Landreaux and Emmaline, give him to Dusty's family after speaking with a priest and visiting a sweat lodge, to find a way to resolve their guilt.
While Peter and Nola are initially reluctant to accept LaRose into their family, perceiving it as an act of betrayal towards their own dead son, they soon warm to him. LaRose later helps protect Nola as she deals with suicidal ideation.
The story also introduces the stories of several of LaRose's ancestors, who were sent to residential schools and endured many traumatic experiences. The first person in the family to be named LaRose, an Ojibwe woman, was a young girl in 1839 when her mother sold her at a trading post. She is raped and later participates in the murder of her rapist. After her death, her remains are stolen by "white 'scientists.'"
The book received primarily favorable reviews.[10] USA Today gave it 3.5 out of 4 stars, while The Sydney Morning Herald described it as a "page-turner," The Kansas City Star described it as "brutally beautiful," and The A.V. Club described it as "everything you want a novel to be." LaRose was described by The Washington Post as a "masterly tale of grief and love" and by The Philadelphia Inquirer described it as a "brilliant, subtle exploration of tragic histories."