Ten Little Indians: Stories
4/5
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Family
Native American Culture
Identity
Education
Personal Growth
Fish Out of Water
Mentor
Quest
Wise Old Man
Love Triangle
Reluctant Hero
Prodigal Son
Underdog
Forbidden Love
Hero's Journey
Resilience
Photography
School
Childhood
Basketball
About this ebook
In these lyrical, affectionate tales from the author of The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian and The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven, characters navigate the crossroads of culture, battle stereotypes, and find themselves through everything from politics to basketball. Richard, the narrator of “Lawyer’s League,” grows up in Seattle, the son of “an African American giant who played defensive end for the University of Washington Huskies” and “a petite Spokane Indian ballerina.” A woman is caught in a restaurant when a suicide bomb goes off in “Can I Get a Witness.” And Estelle Walks Above (née Estelle Miller), studies her way off the Spokane Indian Reservation and goes on to both enjoy and resent the company of the white women of Seattle—who see her as a shamanic genius, and look to her for guidance on everything from sex and fashion to spirituality.
These and the other “warm, revealing, invitingly roundabout stories” in Ten Little Indians run the gamut from earthy wit to sobering emotional truth, mapping the outer reaches of the human heart (The New York Times Book Review).
From a New York Times–bestselling and National Book Award–winning author, these tales, “rambunctious and exuberant, bristle with an edgy and mordant humor” (Chicago Tribune).
This ebook features an illustrated biography including rare photos from the author’s personal collection.
Sherman Alexie
Sherman Alexie, winner of the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction, the PEN/Malamud Award for Short Fiction, a PEN/Hemingway Citation for Best First Fiction, and the National Book Award for Young People's Literature, is a poet, short story writer, novelist, and performer. His twenty-four books include What I've Stolen, What I've Earned, poetry, Blasphemy: New and Selected Stories, and The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, a novel. Alexie has been an urban Indian since 1994 and lives in Seattle with his family.
Read more from Sherman Alexie
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Reviews for Ten Little Indians
20 ratings13 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I love every book I've read from Sherman Alexie and this one is just added to the list.
The collection of short stories can speak to people from all walks of life with their own struggles, and I loved them all. Well, I didn't like the one that focused around basketball, but that is just because of my personal aversion. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Each and every story, every character, every word, is true and real and compassionate and beautiful. Alexie transforms the noble Indian into the noble human being.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I have had a few Sherman Alexie books sitting in my book piles but this one popped to the top of my Nook pile so I dug in and got started. This is a short story compilation. The common theme that ties each of the stories together is that the main character, regardless of gender, is a Native American aboriginal of the Spokane Tribe. My favorite was ?Whatever Happened to Frank Snake Church? about a high school basketball player in later life. But in truth, I quite liked them all. Most of them are set in and around Seattle and explore all kinds of generational views and conflicts in the Native American experience.There is something for everyone in this slim volume. Sherman Alexie is a Northwest treasure that rarely gets the amount of exposure he deserves. I believe he has a loyal local following and I know at least one of his books has been made into a motion picture.This is a solid but slim volume, perfect for short story readers or fans of Northwest story telling. 3 ? stars.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Ten Little Indians is a gem of a book that sat unread on my book shelf for a long time, perhaps too long. I have no idea when I acquired it but I am glad to have read it now rather than at some earlier point in the ten years since it was published, for reasons I shall make clear shortly.Alexie is a masterful storyteller. I first heard of him a number of years ago, in relation to his screenplay, Smoke Signals, and the movie that was made from it. Alexie is Native American and the central characters in this collection of short stories are all Native Americans from the same tribe as his own. Like Alexie, the characters have grown up on the reservation and then relocated to Seattle. Using these common elements as a starting point Alexie takes his characters through a wide swath of life adventures, some elements of which are based in Native American culture and other parts are more universal, or generic 21st century American culture.Having recently moved onto a reservation for vocational reasons I had a different understanding of the way in which he portrayed influences of Native American culture in shaping his characters and their subsequent interaction with non-Natives off of the reservation than I would have had a few months ago. While I have been warmly welcomed here there are some ways in which I will always be an outsider, no matter how many years I stay. His characters, long time residents of the city, remain outsiders while living in their own homeland. I picked Ten Little Indians off my shelf figuring it was finally time to read it and send on to someone else. I was delighted by the stories and characters within its pages and may find myself seeking out Alexie again.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Maybe even 5 stars . . . I waffle. These short stories are far more character-driven than plot-driven, but they are fine character studies indeed. Here are Alexie's familiar Spokane, but mostly a set of "urban" Indians, recognizing and dealing with their place in more than one culture. They are literate, funny, educated, striving, loving, interesting people. And Alexie peppers in lots of his familiar wit and pathos. This was a fun book to dip in and out of, maybe not the emotional effect of some of his other writing, but I enjoyed it and recommend it. -cg
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This a collection (10) of masterfully told short stories. Each story draws you into its world. The characters are based on American Indians of the Spokane tribe. This is the first time I've had the opportunity to read this author or any author who could give me a sense of the voice of the modern American Indian.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This short story collection focuses on eleven different Indians living different lives in North America, mostly in Washington State and in particular in Seattle. The stories include a focus on a college student obsessed by English literature who encounters a Spokane Indian poet, a homeless man who sees his grandmother's dancing outfit in the window of a pawn shop and tries all day to raise $1000 to buy it, a potential basketball star who gave up pursuing professional basketball to honour the death of his mother, an aspiring politician, the relationship between a mother who is adored for her Indian identity by middle class Seattle white women and who hates this, and her adoring son. The stories are really interesting and reveal that having embraced modern life, Indian principles remain fundamental. Four stars.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I really enjoyed this short story collection; the characters are varied and thoroughly fleshed-out.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Ten Little Indians is a book of nine short stories by Sherman Alexie each dealing with trying to come to terms with lives that are no longer traditional and they need to fit into American culture. Each story is linked not by characters or even setting (even though all the stories are set in Seattle), but by ideas and themes.The most obvious example are the Indians (that?s what they call themselves) in the stories are searching for new ceremonies for the lives they lead outside of tribal systems, outside of their traditions, and trying to assimilate into the urban west of the 21st Century. Significantly, the first story is titled ?The Search Engine.? From Corliss in ?Search Engine? to Frank Snake Church in ?Whatever Happened to Frank Snake Church?? all the characters are searching for new ceremonies in their lives or to adapt some of their traditional ones to modern life. They work and live in an assimilated world. Something is missing in their lives. As they try to put their finger on it they discover it?s the lack of the traditional life they all have memories of or that is only a generation removed and their parents or grandparents told them about. Most of the characters discover the same solution to their problem by creating new ceremonies and rituals for the lives they lead. Corliss in ?The Search Engine? is very aware of creating new rituals as she tracks down a native American poet who doesn?t turn out to be all that she imagines him to be. ?What You Pawn I Will Redeem? is almost a fairy tale of a homeless alcoholic Indian and his quest to redeem at least a part of his traditional heritage and what at first seems to be a growing tragedy transcends that altogether and becomes something quite unexpected.Don?t let all this talk of ritual and searching for new ceremonies deter you. The stories have humor to them. Not only do the characters have a cynical outlook on themselves or a sarcastic remark to comment on their situation, but Alexie invests the stories with humor and has fun with the characters. You can tell upon reading that Alexie likes his characters. Even when the characters don?t act so nice it?s evident that Alexie respects the characters and has a certain amount of sympathy for the people in the portraits he?s rendering.While the stories are all of Indians, there are a few Anglos that enter their worlds. What turns the stories to the universal is that the search for new ceremonies for the new world we?ve created isn?t exclusively an Indian pursuit. Today more and more people turn to Native American culture and religion (the last ultimate act of assimilation?) to find their answers in life and we?re passing each other in the opposite direction looking for the same thing.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5There is hardly a topic Alexie didn?t cover in his collection of short stories. Infidelity, book lust and author obsession, September 11, racism, first loves and true loves, fear, passion, grief, death, menstruation?all these come up in these simple and simply wonderful stories. He manages to control his reader?s emotions so well in his carefully crafted stories. Just as ?Do not go gently? got me choked up and about ready to cry, the story completely changes to surrealistic hilarity. ?Can I get a witness? was so good at wrapping me up in the importance of banal interactions, I jumped in my seat when the action started happening.I almost stopped reading because of the first story, ?Search Engine.? He wrote such a bad stereotype of a librarian, I though ?Gee, is he going to paint everyone with this broad a brush?? But he even flipped that notion on its head. Now, I think that?s my favorite story in the bunch. ?The Life and Times of Estelle Walks Above? is a story that started with such a vulgar but frank tone, I wondered if I wanted to keep reading it, but his description of a mother/son relationship was so perfect in how odd it was. I?m sure we?d all love to write our mothers a letter like the one he thinks up.I highly recommend this book.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Wow. Wow wow wow. Sherman Alexie is a brilliant writer. His humor comes effortlessly, his characters are vivid and three-dimensional, and all of his stories are relatable, yet infused with all the uniqueness that the Spokane Indian culture delivers to its characters--the good and the bad. I found that some of the stories, jokes, and themes got a bit repetitive as the collection went along, but overall I am deeply satisfied with my first Alexie read, and will definitely be checking out this author's other works!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5In this collection of short stories by Sherman Alexie, almost all of the main characters are Native-Americans (or part), as Alexie is. Alexie is a Spokane/ Coeur d’Alene Indian who grew up on a Spokane Indian reservation in Washington State — and so his Indian characters are often Spokane Indians. He tends to refer to his characters as Indian, rather than Native-American.In “Ten Little Indians”, there are nine short stories. I liked the first one, “The Search Engine” the most. In this story, Corliss is an university student who loves to read. As Corliss walks through her university library, looking for poetry books,“She endured a contentious and passionate relationship with this library. The huge number of books confirmed how much magic she’e been denied for most of her life, and now she hungrily wanted to read every book on every shelf. an impossible task, to be sure, Herculean in its exaggeration, but Corliss wanted to read herself to death. She wanted to be buried in a coffin filled with used paperbacks”.Corliss discovers a book of poetry by an unknown poet who is also a Spokane Indian — and nobody seems to know what has become of him. She is determined to hunt him down; and then when she finally finds him, he is not what she thought he would be like.As with most short story collections, there were some in “Ten Little Indians” I liked more than others.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5(#43 in the 2003 Book Challenge)Nine stories by Mr. Alexie, each featuring a Native American character or characters (I'm thinking the author himself is the tenth Indian). Let me say upfront that I very much like this author, although somehow I was expecting more from this book. Also, I keep thinking he's going to try another novel (his rookie novel, Reservation Blues was excellent) so I was a little surprised when I heard this, his latest, was more short stories. Mind you, he's good at short stories, but I just know he's got another great novel in there somewhere (and it wasn't Indian Killer, either). Let it out, Sherman, let it out!Grade: B+, bordering on A-. Two of the stories on their own get a solid A.Recommended: I'd give this a positive general recommendation to just about anyone, esp. anyone who is interested in present-day Native American experiences, as opposed to Daniel Day Lewis type sentimental stuff.
Book preview
Ten Little Indians - Sherman Alexie
The Search Engine
ON WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON IN the student union café, Corliss looked up from her American history textbook and watched a young man and younger woman walk in together and sit two tables away. The student union wasn’t crowded, so Corliss clearly heard the young couple’s conversation. He offered her coffee from his thermos, but she declined. Hurt by her rejection, or feigning pain—he always carried two cups because well, you never know, do you?—he poured himself one, sipped and sighed with theatrical pleasure, and monologued. The young woman slumped in her seat and listened. He told her where he was from and where he wanted to go after college, and how much he liked these books and those teachers but hated those movies and these classes, and it was all part of an ordinary man’s list-making attempts to seduce an ordinary woman. Blond, blue-eyed, pretty, and thin, she hid her incipient bulimia beneath a bulky wool sweater. Corliss wanted to buy the skeletal woman a sandwich, ten sandwiches, and a big bowl of vanilla ice cream. Eat, young woman, eat, Corliss thought, and you will be redeemed! The young woman set her backpack on the table and crossed her arms over her chest, but the young man didn’t seem to notice or care about the defensive meaning of her body language. He talked and talked and gestured passionately with long-fingered hands. A former lover, an older woman, had probably told him his hands were artistic, so he assumed all women would be similarly charmed. He wore his long blond hair pulled back into a ponytail and a flowered blue shirt that was really a blouse; he was narcissistic, androgynous, lovely, and yes, charming. Corliss thought she might sleep with him if he took her home to a clean apartment, but she decided to hate him instead. She knew she judged people based on their surface appearances, but Lord Byron said only shallow people don’t judge by surfaces. So Corliss thought of herself as Byronesque as she eavesdropped on the young couple. She hoped one of these ordinary people might say something interesting and original. She believed in the endless nature of human possibility. She would be delighted if these two messy humans transcended their stereotypes and revealed themselves as mortal angels.
Well, you know,
the young man said to the young woman, it was Auden who wrote that no poem ever saved a Jew from the ovens.
Oh,
the young woman said. She didn’t know why he’d abruptly paraphrased Auden. She wasn’t sure who this Auden person was, or why his opinions about poetry should matter to her, or why poetry itself was so important. She knew this coffee-drinking guy wanted to have sex with her, and she was considering it, but he wasn’t improving his chances by making her feel stupid.
Corliss was confused by the poetic non sequitur as well. She thought he might be trying to prove how many books he’d skimmed. Maybe he deserved her contempt, but Corliss realized that very few young men read poetry at Washington State University. And how many of those boys quoted, or misquoted, the poems they’d read? Twenty, ten, less than five? This longhaired guy enjoyed a monopoly on the poetry-quoting market in the southeastern corner of Washington, and he knew it. Corliss had read a few poems by W. H. Auden but couldn’t remember any of them other than the elegy recited in that Hugh Grant romantic comedy. She figured the young man had memorized the first stanzas of thirty-three love poems and used them like propaganda to win the hearts and minds of young women. He’d probably tattooed the opening lines of Andrew Marvell’s To His Coy Mistress
on his chest: Had we but world enough, and time, / This coyness, Lady, were no crime.
Corliss wondered if Shakespeare wrote his plays and sonnets only because he was trying to get laid. Which poet or poem has been quoted most often in the effort to get laid? Most important, which poet or poem has been quoted most successfully in the effort to get laid? Corliss needed to know the serious answers to her silly questions. Or vice versa. So she gathered her books and papers and approached the couple.
Excuse me,
Corliss said to the young man. Was that W. H. Auden you were quoting?
Yes,
he said. His smile was genuine and boyish. He had displayed his intelligence and was being rewarded for it. Why shouldn’t he smile?
I didn’t recognize the quote,
Corliss said. Which poem did it come from?
The young man looked at Corliss and at the young woman. Corliss knew he was choosing between them. The young woman knew it, too, and she decided the whole thing was pointless.
I’ve got to go,
she said, grabbed her backpack, and fled.
Wow, that was quick,
he said. Rejected at the speed of light.
Sorry about that,
Corliss said. But she was pleased with the young woman’s quick decision and quicker flight. If she could resist one man’s efforts to shape and determine her future, perhaps she could resist all future efforts.
It’s all right,
the young man said. Do you want to sit down, keep me company?
No thanks,
Corliss said. Tell me about that Auden quote.
He smiled again. He studied her. She was very short, a few inches under five feet, maybe thirty pounds overweight, and plain-featured. But her skin was clear and dark brown (like good coffee!), and her long black hair hung down past her waist. And she wore red cowboy boots, and her breasts were large, and she knew about Auden, and she was confident enough to approach strangers, so maybe her beauty was eccentric, even exotic. And exoticism was hard to find in Pullman, Washington.
What’s your name?
he asked her.
Corliss.
That’s a beautiful name. What does it mean?
It means Corliss is my name. Are you going to tell me where you read that Auden quote or not?
You’re Indian, aren’t you?
Good-bye,
she said and stood to leave.
Wait, wait,
he said. You don’t like me, do you?
You’re cute and smart, and you’ve gotten everything you’ve ever asked for, and that makes you lazy and dangerous.
Wow, you’re honest. Will you like me better if I’m honest?
I might.
I’ve never read Auden’s poems. Not much, anyway. I read some article about him. They quoted him on the thing about Jews and poems. I don’t know where they got it from. But it’s true, don’t you think?
What’s true?
A good gun will always beat a good poem.
I hope not,
Corliss said and walked away.
Back in Spokane, Washington, Corliss had attended Spokane River High School, which had contained a mirage-library. Sure, the books had looked like Dickens and Dickinson from a distance, but they turned into cookbooks and auto-repair manuals when you picked them up. As a poor kid, and a middle-class Indian, she seemed destined for a minimum-wage life of waiting tables or changing oil. But she had wanted a maximum life, an original aboriginal life, so she had fought her way out of her underfunded public high school into an underfunded public college. So maybe, despite American racism, sexism, and classism, Corliss’s biography confirmed everything nearly wonderful and partially meritorious about her country. Ever the rugged individual, she had collected aluminum cans during the summer before her junior year of high school so she could afford the yearlong SAT-prep course that had astronomically raised her scores and won her a dozen academic scholarships. At the beginning of every semester, Corliss had called the history and English teachers at the local prep school she couldn’t afford, and asked what books they would be reading in class, and she had found those books and lived with them like siblings. And those same teachers, good white people whose whiteness and goodness blended and separated, had faxed her study guides and copies of the best student papers. Two of those teachers, without having met Corliss in person, had sent her graduation gifts of money and yet more books. She’d been a resourceful thief, a narcissistic Robin Hood who stole a rich education from white people and kept it.
In the Washington State University library, her version of Sherwood Forest, Corliss walked the poetry stacks. She endured a contentious and passionate relationship with this library. The huge number of books confirmed how much magic she’d been denied for most of her life, and now she hungrily wanted to read every book on every shelf. An impossible task, to be sure, Herculean in its exaggeration, but Corliss wanted to read herself to death. She wanted to be buried in a coffin filled with used paperbacks.
She found W. H. Auden’s Collected Poems on a shelf above her head. She stood on her toes and pulled down the thick volume, but she also pulled out another book that dropped to the floor. It was a book of poems titled In the Reservation of My Mind, by Harlan Atwater. According to the author’s biography on the back cover, Harlan Atwater was a Spokane Indian, but Corliss had never heard of the guy. Her parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents were all born and raised on the Spokane Indian Reservation. And the rest of her ancestors, going back a dozen generations, were born and raised on the land that would eventually be called the Spokane Indian Reservation. Her one white ancestor, a Russian fur trapper, had been legally adopted into the tribe, given some corny Indian name she didn’t like to repeat, and served on the tribal council for ten years. Corliss was a Spokane Indian born in Sacred Heart Hospital, only a mile from the Spokane River Falls, the heart of the Spokane Tribe, and had grown up in the city of Spokane, which was really an annex of the reservation, and thought she knew or knew of every Spokane. Demographically and biologically speaking, Corliss was about as Spokane as a Spokane Indian can be, and only three thousand other Spokanes of various Spokane-ness existed in the whole world, so how had this guy escaped her attention? She opened the book and read the first poem:
The Naming Ceremony
No Indian ever gave me an Indian name
So I named myself.
I am Crying Shame.
I am Takes the Blame.
I am the Four Directions:
South, A Little More South,
Way More South, and All the Way South.
If you are ever driving toward Mexico
And see me hitchhiking, you’ll know me
By the size of my feet.
My left foot is named Self-Pity
And my right foot is named Born to Lose.
But if you give me a ride, you can call me
And all of my parts any name you choose.
Corliss recognized the poem as a free-verse sonnet whose end rhymes gave it a little more music. It was a funny and clumsy poem desperate to please the reader. It was like a slobbery puppy in an animal shelter: Choose me! Choose me! But the poem was definitely charming and strange. Harlan Atwater was making fun of being Indian, of the essential sadness of being Indian, and so maybe he was saying Indians aren’t sad at all. Maybe Indians are just big-footed hitchhikers eager to tell a joke! That wasn’t a profound thought, but maybe it was an accurate one. But can you be accurate without profundity? Corliss didn’t know the answer to the question.
She carried the Atwater and Auden books to the front desk to check them out. The librarian was a small woman wearing khaki pants and large glasses. Corliss wanted to shout at her: Honey, get yourself some contacts and a pair of leather chaps! Fight your stereotypes!
Wow,
the librarian said as she scanned the books’ bar codes and entered them into her computer.
Wow what?
Corliss asked.
You’re the first person who’s ever checked out this book.
The librarian held up the Atwater.
Is it new?
We’ve had it since 1972.
Corliss wondered what happens to a book that sits unread on a library shelf for thirty years. Can a book rightfully be called a book if it never gets read? If a tree falls in a forest and gets pulped to make paper for a book that never gets read, but there’s nobody there to read it, does it make a sound?
How many books never get checked out?
Corliss asked the librarian.
Most of them,
she said.
Corliss had never once considered the fate of library books. She’d never wondered how many books go unread. She loved books. How could she not worry about the unread? She felt like a disorganized scholar, an inconsiderate lover, an abusive mother, and a cowardly solider.
Are you serious?
Corliss asked. What are we talking about here? If you were guessing, what is the percentage of books in this library that never get checked out?
We’re talking sixty percent of them. Seriously. Maybe seventy percent. And I’m being optimistic. It’s probably more like eighty or ninety percent. This isn’t a library, it’s an orphanage.
The librarian spoke in a reverential whisper. Corliss knew she’d misjudged this passionate woman. Maybe she dressed poorly, but she was probably great in bed, certainly believed in God and goodness, and kept an illicit collection of overdue library books on her shelves.
How many books do you have here?
Corliss asked.
Two million, one hundred thousand, and eleven,
the librarian said proudly, but Corliss was frightened. What happens to the world when that many books go unread? And what happens to the unread authors of those unread books?
And don’t think it’s just this library, either,
the librarian said. There’s about eighteen million books in the Library of Congress, and nobody reads about seventeen and a half million of them.
You’re scaring me.
Sorry about that,
the librarian said. These are due back in two weeks.
Corliss carried the Auden and Atwater books out of the library and into the afternoon air. She sat on a bench and flipped through the pages. The Auden was worn and battered, with pen and pencil notes scribbled all over the margins. Three generations of WSU students had defaced Auden with their scholarly graffiti, but Atwater was stiff and unmarked. This book had not been exposed to direct sunlight in three decades. W. H. Auden didn’t need Corliss to read him—his work was already immortal—but she felt like she’d rescued Harlan Atwater. And who else should rescue the poems of a Spokane Indian but another Spokane? Corliss felt the weight and heat of destiny. She had been chosen. God had nearly dropped Atwater’s book on her head. Who knew the Supreme One could be so obvious? But then again, when have the infallible been anything other than predictable? Maybe God was dropping other books on other people’s heads, Corliss thought. Maybe every book in every library is patiently waiting for its savior. Ha! She felt romantic and young and foolish. What kind of Indian loses her mind over a book of poems? She was that kind of Indian, she was exactly that kind of Indian, and it was the only kind of Indian she knew how to be.
Corliss lived alone. She supposed that was a rare thing for a nineteen-year-old college sophomore, especially a Native American college student living on scholarships and luck and family charity, but she couldn’t stand the thought of sharing her apartment with another person. She didn’t want to live with another Indian because she understood Indians all too well. If she took an Indian roommate, Corliss knew she’d soon be taking in the roommate’s cousin, little brother, half uncle, and long-lost dog, and none of them would contribute anything toward the rent other than wispy apologies. Indians were used to sharing and called it tribalism, but Corliss suspected it was yet another failed form of communism. Over the last two centuries, Indians had learned how to stand in lines for food, love, hope, sex, and dreams, but they didn’t know how to step away. They were good at line-standing and didn’t know if they’d be good at anything else. Of course, all sorts of folks made it their business to confirm Indian fears and insecurities. Indians hadn’t invented the line. And George Armstrong Custer is alive and well in the twenty-first century, Corliss thought, though he kills Indians by dumping huge piles of paperwork on their skulls. But Indians made themselves easy targets for bureaucratic skull-crushing, didn’t they? Indians took numbers and lined up for skull-crushing. They’d rather die standing together in long lines than wandering alone in the wilderness. Indians were terrified of being lonely, of being exiled, but Corliss had always dreamed of solitude. Since she’d shared her childhood home with an Indian mother, an Indian father, seven Indian siblings, and a random assortment of Indian cousins, strangers, and party crashers, she cherished her domestic solitude and kept it sacred. Maybe she lived in an academic gulag, but she’d chosen to live that way. She furnished her apartment with a mattress on the floor, one bookshelf, two lamps, a dining table, two chairs, two sets of plates, cups, and utensils, three pots, and one frying pan. Her wardrobe consisted of three pairs of blue jeans, three white blouses, one pair of tennis shoes, three pairs of cowboy boots, six white T-shirts, thirteen pairs of socks, and a week’s worth of underwear. Her only luxuries (necessities!) were books. There were hundreds of them stacked around her apartment. She’d never met one human being more interesting to her than a good book. So how could she live with an uninteresting Indian when she could live with John Donne, Elizabeth Bishop, and Langston Hughes?
Corliss didn’t want to live with a white roommate, either, no matter how interesting he or she might become. Hell, even if Emily Dickinson were resurrected and had her reclusive-hermit-unrequited-love-addict gene removed from her DNA, Corliss wouldn’t have wanted to room with her. White people, no matter how smart, were too romantic about Indians. White people looked at the Grand Canyon, Niagara Falls, the full moon, newborn babies, and Indians with the same goofy sentimentalism. Being a smart Indian, Corliss had always taken advantage of this romanticism, but that didn’t mean she wanted to share the refrigerator with it. If white folks assumed she was serene and spiritual and wise simply because she was an Indian, and thought she was special based on those mistaken assumptions, then Corliss saw no reason to contradict them. The world is a competitive place, and a poor Indian girl needs all the advantages she can get. So if George W. Bush, a man who possessed no remarkable distinctions other than being the son of a former U.S. president, could also become president, then Corliss figured she could certainly benefit from positive ethnic stereotypes and not feel any guilt about it. For five centuries, Indians were slaughtered because they were Indians, so if Corliss received a free coffee now and again from the local free-range lesbian Indiophile, who could possibly find the wrong in that? In the twenty-first century, any Indian with a decent vocabulary wielded enormous social power, but only if she was a stoic who rarely spoke. If she lived with a white person, Corliss knew she’d quickly be seen as ordinary, because she was ordinary. It’s tough to share a bathroom with an Indian and continue to romanticize her. If word got around that Corliss was ordinary, even boring, she feared she’d lose her power and magic. She knew there would come a day when white folks finally understood that Indians are every bit as relentlessly boring, selfish, and smelly as they are, and that would be a wonderful day for human rights but a terrible day for Corliss.
Corliss caught the number 7 home from the library. She wanted to read Harlan Atwater’s book on the bus, but she also wanted to keep it private. The book felt dangerous and forbidden. At her stop, she stepped off and walked toward her apartment, and then ran. She felt giddy, foolish, and strangely aroused, as if she were running home to read pornography. Once alone, Corliss sat on the floor, backed into a corner, and read Harlan Atwater’s book of poems. There were forty-five free-verse sonnets. Corliss found it interesting that an Indian of his generation wrote sonnets, while other Indians occupied Alcatraz and Wounded Knee. Most of the poems were set in and around the Spokane Indian Reservation, so Corliss wondered again why she’d never heard of this man. How many poetry lovers were among the Spokanes? Fifty, thirty, fewer than twenty? And how many Spokanes would recognize a sonnet when they saw it, let alone be able to write one? Since her public high school teachers had known how much Corliss loved poetry, and had always loved it, why hadn’t one of them handed her this book? Maybe this book could have saved her years of shame. Instead of trying to hide her poetry habit from her friends and family, and sneaking huge piles of poetry books into her room, maybe she could have proudly read a book of poems at the dinner table. She could have held that book above her head and shouted, See, look, it’s a book of poems by another Spokane, what are you going to do about that?
Instead, she’d endured endless domestic interrogations about her bookish nature.
During one family reunion, her father sat around the living room with his three brothers. That was over twelve hundred pounds of Spokane Indian sharing a couch and a bowl of tortilla chips. Coming home from school, Corliss tried to dash across the room and make her escape, but one uncle noticed the book under her arm.
Why you always reading?
he asked.
I like stories,
she said. It seemed to be the safest answer. Indians loved to think of themselves as the best storytellers in the world, and maybe they were, but did they need to be so sure of it?
She’s reading those poems again,
her father said. She’s always reading those poems.
She loved her father and uncles. She loved how they filled a room with their laughter and rank male bodies and endless nostalgia and quick tempers, but she hated their individual fears and collective lack of ambition. They all worked blue-collar construction jobs, not because they loved the good work or found it valuable or rewarding but because some teacher or guidance counselor once told them all they could work only blue-collar jobs. When they were young, some authority figure had