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Dennis E. Staples

Author of This Town Sleeps

2+ Works 218 Members 11 Reviews

Works by Dennis E. Staples

This Town Sleeps (2020) 159 copies, 10 reviews
Passing Through a Prairie Country: A Novel (2025) 59 copies, 1 review

Associated Works

Asimov's Science Fiction: Vol. 41, No. 9 & 10 [September/October 2017] (2017) — Contributor — 17 copies, 2 reviews

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Common Knowledge

Birthdate
19xx
Gender
male
Education
Institute of American Indian Arts (MFA)
Clarion West Writers Workshop (2018)
Nationality
Red Lake Nation
USA
Places of residence
Bemidji, Minnesota, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Minnesota, USA

Members

Reviews

11 reviews
I thought this was a beautiful novel. When I found out it was a debut, I was even more impressed.

Dennis E. Staples is an Ojibwe author and I already know that I look forward to a continuing voice from him. There is a lovely blend of traditional and contemporary voices in this book.

The main character, Marion is a young, gay Ojibwe man. It's clear from the beginning of the novel that he is a bit lost about where he belongs. Marion left the reservation when he was young, then returned to live show more in a town that was close after leaving a relationship. Some of his family is very traditional and throughout the story, Marion struggles with what he believes. There are very beautiful moments when he seems on the path back towards his spiritual roots, and then there are times when he seems almost hopeless.

The writing is beautiful. It's often so poetic that I could have read far more of it. Staples has a great style. The tale unfurls as the novel progresses, and more people are brought into the tale. I did find the multiple POVs a little confusing at times; there were a few times when I wasn't quite sure which character I was reading about. But, Staples' writing style more than made up for my minor confusion.

I really enjoyed the infusions of the Ojibwe tradition throughout this story. In a way there's a very traditional story... almost mythical, being told at the same time as there's a modern tale.

Marion has become reacquainted with an old friend from high school. Things are different when they meet again. Marion is an out gay man and Shannon - is closeted and suffering under a childhood filled with toxic masculinity and homophobia. When they meet over a hook-up app they enter into a relationship of sorts. Marion seems to accept it's the way his life will be and Shannon is so busy trying to hide who he is that he's terrified.

As the two men struggle with their differences Marion enters onto a spiritual journey of sorts. One night he seems to bring a dead dog to life and it leads him to the burial place of another friend he grew up with.

This book has a component of mystery in it, an introduction to some Ojibwe traditions and a relationship story.
show less
I thought this was a beautiful novel. When I found out it was a debut, I was even more impressed.

Dennis E. Staples is an Ojibwe author and I already know that I look forward to a continuing voice from him. There is a lovely blend of traditional and contemporary voices in this book.

The main character, Marion is a young, gay Ojibwe man. It's clear from the beginning of the novel that he is a bit lost about where he belongs. Marion left the reservation when he was young, then returned to live show more in a town that was close after leaving a relationship. Some of his family is very traditional and throughout the story, Marion struggles with what he believes. There are very beautiful moments when he seems on the path back towards his spiritual roots, and then there are times when he seems almost hopeless.

The writing is beautiful. It's often so poetic that I could have read far more of it. Staples has a great style. The tale unfurls as the novel progresses, and more people are brought into the tale. I did find the multiple POVs a little confusing at times; there were a few times when I wasn't quite sure which character I was reading about. But, Staples' writing style more than made up for my minor confusion.

I really enjoyed the infusions of the Ojibwe tradition throughout this story. In a way there's a very traditional story... almost mythical, being told at the same time as there's a modern tale.

Marion has become reacquainted with an old friend from high school. Things are different when they meet again. Marion is an out gay man and Shannon - is closeted and suffering under a childhood filled with toxic masculinity and homophobia. When they meet over a hook-up app they enter into a relationship of sorts. Marion seems to accept it's the way his life will be and Shannon is so busy trying to hide who he is that he's terrified.

As the two men struggle with their differences Marion enters onto a spiritual journey of sorts. One night he seems to bring a dead dog to life and it leads him to the burial place of another friend he grew up with.

This book has a component of mystery in it, an introduction to some Ojibwe traditions and a relationship story.
show less
Dennis E. Staples' This Town Sleeps is a wonderful tapestry to a book with many threads contributing to a rich narrative with multiple moods and perspectives. Marion, the central character, lives near an Ojibwe reservation, which he lived on when he was younger. He's a gay man trying to meet others like him, but having little luck in the small, everyone-knows-everyone area he calls home. One of the novel's main narrative threads is the story of his on-again, off-again relationship with a show more beyond closeted former high school classmate.

Another important thread takes readers into a world where the ordinary and supernatural overlap. Marion finds himself connected to a spectral dog, who seems to be connected to another former classmate—one who was killed immediately after their reservation school team won the state basketball championship. Marion begins to build a friendship with that man's widow and with the daughter he didn't live to meet.

Then there are narrative threads reaching into the past sharing generational stories of some of the "leading" families in the area.

Tommy Orange, author of There. There, has reviewed the novel enthusiastically with good reason. I shares difficult, complex truths of both a literal and a more mysterious kind.
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This definitely feels like a story from Never Whistle at Night, so little explanation and so many layers of meaning. Addiction and those who exploit it in others are explored through an entity that seems to be haunting a casino. I really enjoyed the writing but did get a bit tangled in parts.

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Statistics

Works
2
Also by
1
Members
218
Popularity
#102,473
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
11
ISBNs
10

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