"Two wrongs may not make a right but a thousand wrongs make a writer.”

Wednesday, January 10, 2024

INDIAN HORSE A review

In awe of an expertly bound book, I ran my hand across the smooth surface of the Milkweed edition of Indian Horse, the feel of it a tactile pleasure. From front to back, I fanned the pages, intrigued by the page numbers elegantly printed in cursive on the bottom left, and the smell of print. I leafed through themI couldn't seem to stopthe promise of a story captured between the covers of this book.


Indian Horse is the beautifully written story of the Ojibway youth, Saul Indian Horse, who is trapped at an early age in Canada's residential school system. The story is an affirmation of Saul's perseverance and resilience as he struggles to survive the horror of the school and the demeaning actions of those who felt compelled to subjugate and drive the savage out of the Indian. In testament to the endurance and spiritual wisdom of his people and the grandmother he remembers, Saul battles to reclaim the dignity he was endowed with. I loved him and cried with him.

I just realized there was a movie made and it's on Netflix. I recommend it. But read the book first, if you can. 

Gifted to me at Christmas, owning and reading this novel has made me realize how personal books are to me.  Books have been my best friends since I learned to tie my shoes. Stages of life bookended by the books I read.

Now we have eBooks, the epitome of inanimate. They aren't booksI would arguebut devices. They are screens that need battery power to light up. They need electricity to turn the pages. They smell like nothing. But they are cheaper than print (and friendlier to the environment), thus the way of the future. 

I gave up my eight tracks for cassettes and my cassettes for CDs. I confess to the convenience of Alexa sitting on a shelf, devoid of rizz even when she's plugged in, but she has her place, like an electronic reader on an airplane or in the dark of bedtime. But my bookshelves sag with that which I will never give up. Books that remain readable when the power goes off.

It's early in the year, but it will be difficult for any novel to unseat Indian Horse's number one position on my shelf.


Poets and Storytellers,  invited us to "de-retro" our vintage vocabulary with a post, including the Oxford word of the year for 2023 - Rizz,  an informal noun defined as style, charm, or attractiveness; the ability to attract a romantic or sexual partner. 

I stuck it in above. Did you notice.


yvonneosborne.com


17 comments:

Helen said...

I began to giggle at "A druid named Fritz! Cheers.

Yvonne Osborne said...

Thanks Helen! Yeah...kinda writing stuff like this. (just to prove we aren't bots!)

Rosemary Nissen-Wade said...

Now I'll have to read that book! Enjoyed your light-hearted verse, too.

I do have a lot of paper books in my shelves, many of which I'd never part with – but I love my little Kindle for reading in bed, and the beauty is that so long as it's been charged (which is pretty quick and easy) it works when the light is out, or even when the power's off!

colleen said...

I think the word rizz almost asks to be a limerick-like poem. I can't play it in Scrabble because it the game only has 1 Z but I can play Za, a word short for pizza that no one I know has ever used.

Rajani said...

Yes it is a serious predicament (beyond the difference in the experience itself): save the forests or use lithium powered devices. Perhaps more sharing/ swapping books, more libraries, more recycling while we wait for tech to provide a more just, green solution.

Magaly Guerrero said...

The first line of the limerick made me burst into laughter. Then I got to the end and felt so bad about poor Fritz. I hope he gets those metal brains back!

Indian Horse sounds like a fantastic story. One of those that keeps us raging at the horrors and rooting for the main character. I enjoy those, occasional sobbing and all.

On the subject of paper books and digital books, I think you said it well. They both have their uses. These days, when it comes to paper books, I only collect the ones that truly mean something to me. For the rest, I get digital books and audio books. And for the books I truly love, I get all three formats--my bookish greed is legendary. πŸ˜…

Yvonne Osborne said...

Magaly,
Thanks! I agree whole heartedly! I'm glad you liked my silly limerick. Indian Horse is a great book and one I love owning. I don't buy as many as I used to and use the library a lot but there's still nothing (in my book!) like a real book in hand.

Yvonne Osborne said...

Rosemary
Thanks! My kindle is very old and doesn't charge fast and doesn't even have a dark mode. I should buy a new one.

robkistner said...

You rizzed it righteous Yvonne! πŸ™‚πŸ‘πŸΌ✌🏼🫢🏼

Yvonne Osborne said...

Rob, Thanks!!

Debi Swim said...

Thanks for the book recommendation and the funny limerick

Yvonne Osborne said...

Hi Debi!
Thank you for reading. I love the book. I hope you do too.

Sherry Blue Sky said...

I imagine the book is very powerful. The movie certainly was. Some books really have impact. Lovely of you to stop by my blog, Yvonne. Hope it isnt too cold where you are.

Yvonne Osborne said...

Hi Sherry,
I didn't even realize there was a movie until recently. I'd love to watch it if I can find it. Thanks!

purplepeninportland.com said...

You have me yearning to read this book. Nothing replaces a book with jackets, and pages you can touch.

Jim said...

I just tried to see if our library carried "Indian Horse" but my machine said 'Out of Serviced' five times. Guess it got broken. I'll see later if they have it, probably okay in the morning.
I like your writeup, yes, I agree, shouldn't call digital stuff books. Into a movie? We haven't been to a movie in several years now. Forget that.
..

Yvonne Osborne said...

Hey, Jim
Hi! Yes, I just edited this post after we watched the movie last night. The library system in Michigan has an interlibrary loan system which is awesome as a patron can get almost anything and pick it up at their home library. They say they'll stock mine (hearts) and I've been pestering my friends and family to coerce their local libraries to stock it. As it doesn't come out until April, it might be a little early for them to have access to the data at Ingram. What do I know?
Thanks again! You rock.