Product Description: In a first novel by the author of The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven, legendary blues guitarist Robert Johnson appears on an Indian reservation to lead a Catholic rock band. 40,000 first printing.
Reservation Blues Review For Class Reading Reservation Blues was a moving and historical book that used humor along with great stories and tales told by the characters. In this story it tells about the life of Native American's life on the reservation and the frustrations and complications they went through in everyday life. Although the book start out slow with the visuals and setting up the story line it starts to unfold into a more moving and interesting story. It tells about family, struggles, alcoholism, and other things that conflict with leading happy and fulfilling lives on the reservations. These were interesting facts to learn about but after a while the story became predictable and didn't leave much to the imagination.
By Sarah and Anna
A Half-baked Potatoe Reservation Blues is basically a book written to stereotype Native Americans. If you respect Native American culture, this is probably not the book for you. It stereotypes a race of people more than any other book I have ever read, and because the author, Sherman Alexie, is a Native American, it makes the stereotypes even more believable. This is not to say that it is a bad book. In fact, it is quite a good book with a distinct, original, and refreshing voice filled with tongue-in-cheek humor. As far as the story goes, it is a good story with believable characters that are easy to connect with. The problem though is that it never reaches a climax. It goes up and up but falls short of any real climax point. The ending is unfulfilling with the struggles of the characters never finding a true resolution. The story ultimately leaves the reader with a half-baked feeling. Reservation Blues isn't a must read, but if you are looking for a new style of writing or a book to read in the meantime, I would recommend this book.
a fine fable of redemption Written by Sherman Alexie, this fable about the hometown challenges of his own home town, makes a fine, sensitive novel.
This is the struggle of an Indian band - and it's this double entendre that is at the heart of his tale. Three Spokane Indians and two Flathead sisters form a musical group, which, in its character and pathologies, are a metaphor for Indians everywhere.
The band comprises two sisters, two lifelong friends, and a misfit. The sisters, Checkers and Chess Warm Water, members of the Flathead tribe, wrestle with the corruption of family. The friends, Victor and Junior, are brutalized by alcohol, crushed dreams, and aimlessness. Thomas Builds-the-Fire, a creative and sensitive man, suffers the terrifying indifference of his people. Driven by their individual ambitions, each makes their own deal with the devil in exchange for the promise of a better life.
Among a host of horrors Alexie parades before our characters, the greatest tragedy is their rejection by their own tribe, a consequence of their struggle to rise above the provincial dissolution of the reservation.
Yet some of Alexie's characters survive. For them, redemption comes from their capacity as individuals and as a band to thread a course between hopeless surrender and the ravaging predations of white culture. The heroism of Alexie's protagonists lies in their quiet self-awareness and the courage to be the individuals they are: neither white doppelgangers nor Indian cliches.
Side plots and supplementary characters shoot like the limbs of an unpruned tree: while their fruit is often lovely, the tree suffers from diffusion. But the writing makes it all worthwhile: Alexie is funny and pleasurable to read. The rewards of dialog and scene construction are, by themselves, worth the price of admission.
Music and Salvation The use of music as a means to institute change in a lost society is a thematic element central to both plot and character development in Sherman Alexie's novel, Reservation Blues. The characters face a variety of complex decisions while at a crossroad in their lives. Discerning the often-blurry line between need and greed is vital for the young men and women to achieve personal success. As Native Americans, they must reject the skewed value system that prevents their brothers from rising out of a life of degradation. They must overcome hardships that accompany their ethnicity and embrace native tradition in order to spread the word of truth to others in need of salvation. Music and storytelling are tools for the protagonist to raise awareness in a society drowning in the evils of materialism.
As lead singer for the popular new age band, Coyote Springs, Thomas Builds-the-Fire must foster cohesion among the unlikely group of Indians. Each band member finds him or herself at a personal crossroad in the days leading up to the one shot at success dangling before them by two New York seedy recording executives that are appropriately named George Wright and Phil Sheridan. Ironically, their names are consistent with two deadly United States Army generals, George Wright and Phillip Henry Sheridan, who fought bloody battles against Indian tribes in the 1850's and 1860's. General Wright instructed his troops to descend unexpectedly upon the allied Spokane, Coeur d'Alene, and Palouse tribes in what was supposed to be a nonviolent meeting in 1857 on the Spokane Plain. General Sheridan became famous, in part, for his racist aphorism, "The only good Indian is a dead Indian."
Builds-the-Fire represents future possibilities for Native Americans. He is a lonely soul, a misfit both on and off the reservation. Storytelling is his unconscious attempt at holding onto native tradition. He is oblivious to the fact that he is a wise leader in the making. He lives in an unfinished HUD home, but loves the reservation, the land, the Indians. He expresses no bitterness toward the Bureau of Indian Affairs after cutting the funding mid way through his home's construction. Living conditions are grueling on the reservation. Jobs are scarce. Government positions go to the white community. Thomas' home is low on the long list of priorities for unfinished things on the Spokane reservation.
Word of Coyote Springs' talent spreads outside of the reservation and the band faces the real possibility of commercial success; but following the dream, Thomas wonders what the cost will be. Success will enable them obtain the riches known only to them via cable television; but, what if this is just another trick by the white man? The white man offers his friendship in order to move in for the kill, and then goes on his way laughing. He is becoming the leader that will build, or rekindle the fire for others. He will marry band member, Chess Warm Water, and produce more Indians to keep the word, the tradition, alive. Together they can make the world a better place.
Understanding the protagonists' relationship to folklore and the blues genre enriches the thematic element in the novel. Historically, blues music associated with African American suffering caused by white men during the days of slavery. African American character and real life blues musician, Robert Johnson sold his soul for success many years earlier, now he finds comfort in simplicity with a harmonica. Builds-the-Fire finds his release in relating stories as a way to keep tradition alive. It enables him to share his message with others and if he chooses the right road, his talent will afford him the opportunity to make the world a better place.
Interesting, yes. Outstanding, no. I read this book because my friend was reading it and what she reads, I normally like very much. I did like the valuable insight into the firsthand racism that the characters experience, the distressing conditions on the reservations and the true to life characters. I did not enjoy the elusive, spiritual Robt. Johnson character nor "Big Mom". For some reason, reading about those two made me uncomfortable and wanting to simply move forward.
Also, the story unwinding into the band Coyote Springs' evolution was too far-fetched and very much less than realistic. Seriously, Johnson's "magic" guitar? And the sisters, Checkers and Chess suddenly spring forth as superior singers - again too unrealistic for me. Fiction it is, but a little too much fiction for me.
I did not like Reservation Blues however I won't give up on Sherman Alexie. Alexie has good reviews so I will try again...