Calling for a Blanket Dance
by Oscar Hokeah
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A moving and deeply engaging novel about a young Native American man as he learns to find strength in his familial identity.Told in a series of voices, Calling for a Blanket Dance takes us into the life of Ever Geimausaddle through the multigenerational perspectives of his family as they face myriad obstacles. His father's injury at the hands of corrupt police, his mother's struggle to hold on to her job and care for her husband, the constant resettlement of the family, and the legacy of show more centuries of injustice all intensify Ever's bottled-up rage. Meanwhile, all of Ever's relatives have ideas about who he is and who he should be. His Cherokee grandmother urges the family to move across Oklahoma to find security; his grandfather hopes to reunite him with his heritage through traditional gourd dances; his Kiowa cousin reminds him that he's connected to an ancestral past. And once an adult, Ever must take the strength given to him by his relatives to save not only himself but also the next generation of family.
How will this young man visualize a place for himself when the world hasn't given him a place to start with? Honest, heartbreaking, and ultimately uplifting, Calling for a Blanket Dance is the story of how Ever Geimausaddle found his way to home. show less
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Protagonist Ever Geimausaddle’s mother is Cherokee and Kiowa and his father is Mexican. He and his relatives experience many obstacles and issues common to Native American communities, such as depression, unemployment, and addiction. Ever’s story is told from multiple generational perspectives, starting with his grandparents. Each chapter is narrated by a different character. Ever eventually gets to speak on his own behalf in the ending chapter.
This novel portrays how community and culture can be helpful in overcoming individual problems. The author highlights many distinctions between Cherokee and Kiowa traditions. It includes stomp dances, the titular blanket dance, and powwows. I particularly enjoyed the way the novel is show more structured, gradually providing more information as the story progresses. It is an impressive debut. show less
This novel portrays how community and culture can be helpful in overcoming individual problems. The author highlights many distinctions between Cherokee and Kiowa traditions. It includes stomp dances, the titular blanket dance, and powwows. I particularly enjoyed the way the novel is show more structured, gradually providing more information as the story progresses. It is an impressive debut. show less
Oscar Hokeah's Calling for a Blanket Dance is a beautifully crafted work of fiction that speaks to the the complicated ties family and "family" build with one another over generations. The promo materials present this title as the story of Ever Geimausadle, but Calling for a Blanket Dance is so much more than a single-character book. Yes, Ever is a frequent presence, but even when talking about Ever, the book's other characters offer readers a much broader portrait.
The different branches of Ever's family include Kiowas, Cherokees, and Mexicanos. These different branches have their areas of tension, but no one in this book would deny that every other character, regardless of their differences, is family. Many of the events in this novel show more are discouraging, even tragic, but Hokeah's broad cast of characters also allows for genuine possibilities of hope and selfhood—and these positive moments never feel false or forced.
The role of narrator in Calling for a Blanket Dance is distributed among members of this extended family. Most "speak" only once, though a few key characters have the chance to speak twice. This variation in narrator gives readers a way into this family that embraces so many cultures and will teach most readers quite a bit about each of these cultures. The book integrates words and phrases in Kiowa, Cherokee, and Spanish. Usually, these are easy to understand from context, but even when they aren't, the reader's uncertainty about what's being said is a powerful tool reminding us that embracing diversity means embracing that which we don't know and not just that which we learn.
Calling for a Blanket Dance is a book that would reward multiple readings, though the rewards of a single reading are already substantial. Small connections and their importance can become clearer; the motivations of individual characters grow richer as readers revisit what these characters say. This is a buy-or-request-it-now title, a book you don't want to abandon on your one-of-these-days pile. It's also a title that you can read, put down, and return to. Reading in this way may make the complex relatedness between the characters more difficult to follow, but doesn't diminish the the diversity, strengths, and perspectives of the novel's many characters.
I received a free electronic review copy of this title from the publisher via NetGalley; the opinions are my own. show less
The different branches of Ever's family include Kiowas, Cherokees, and Mexicanos. These different branches have their areas of tension, but no one in this book would deny that every other character, regardless of their differences, is family. Many of the events in this novel show more are discouraging, even tragic, but Hokeah's broad cast of characters also allows for genuine possibilities of hope and selfhood—and these positive moments never feel false or forced.
The role of narrator in Calling for a Blanket Dance is distributed among members of this extended family. Most "speak" only once, though a few key characters have the chance to speak twice. This variation in narrator gives readers a way into this family that embraces so many cultures and will teach most readers quite a bit about each of these cultures. The book integrates words and phrases in Kiowa, Cherokee, and Spanish. Usually, these are easy to understand from context, but even when they aren't, the reader's uncertainty about what's being said is a powerful tool reminding us that embracing diversity means embracing that which we don't know and not just that which we learn.
Calling for a Blanket Dance is a book that would reward multiple readings, though the rewards of a single reading are already substantial. Small connections and their importance can become clearer; the motivations of individual characters grow richer as readers revisit what these characters say. This is a buy-or-request-it-now title, a book you don't want to abandon on your one-of-these-days pile. It's also a title that you can read, put down, and return to. Reading in this way may make the complex relatedness between the characters more difficult to follow, but doesn't diminish the the diversity, strengths, and perspectives of the novel's many characters.
I received a free electronic review copy of this title from the publisher via NetGalley; the opinions are my own. show less
Calling for a Blanket Dance follows the timeline of Ever Geimausaddle's life, told in vignettes from the perspectives of his family members. It's a story about identity, families, and community, and how Ever grows into the person he becomes as a result.
There is a lot to like in this debut novel. The story and characters feel authentic; there is no glossing-over gritty details or leaving out things that might make someone look imperfect. I especially liked learning more about Kiowa and Cherokee culture, as I'll admit I didn't know all that much going into this read. I think it was ultimately a smart move on Hokeah's part to tell the story in the voices of Ever's family, rather than sticking solely to one or two perspectives, although I show more definitely needed to refer to the family tree a couple of times early in the book.
If I have any complaints, it's that it feels like there are some big chunks of Ever's life missing from the novel, especially when he is an adult. I don't expect the entirety of his life to be laid out on the page, but I do wish we had more information about his life after a certain point. (I'm trying to avoid spoilers here, but the family tree does kind of spoil part of it.) That being said, I don't think it's integral to the story being told; perhaps I just wanted a longer book because I wasn't ready to say goodbye to the story just yet!
Overall, this is a heartwrenching story about one man's life. If you're a fan of literary fiction, this is a fantastic read; you'll be thinking about it long after you read the last page.
Thank you to Algonquin and NetGalley for providing a copy for review. show less
There is a lot to like in this debut novel. The story and characters feel authentic; there is no glossing-over gritty details or leaving out things that might make someone look imperfect. I especially liked learning more about Kiowa and Cherokee culture, as I'll admit I didn't know all that much going into this read. I think it was ultimately a smart move on Hokeah's part to tell the story in the voices of Ever's family, rather than sticking solely to one or two perspectives, although I show more definitely needed to refer to the family tree a couple of times early in the book.
If I have any complaints, it's that it feels like there are some big chunks of Ever's life missing from the novel, especially when he is an adult. I don't expect the entirety of his life to be laid out on the page, but I do wish we had more information about his life after a certain point. (I'm trying to avoid spoilers here, but the family tree does kind of spoil part of it.) That being said, I don't think it's integral to the story being told; perhaps I just wanted a longer book because I wasn't ready to say goodbye to the story just yet!
Overall, this is a heartwrenching story about one man's life. If you're a fan of literary fiction, this is a fantastic read; you'll be thinking about it long after you read the last page.
Thank you to Algonquin and NetGalley for providing a copy for review. show less
A novel depicting the child-to-adult life of one Kiowa/Cherokee/Mexican man through the perspectives of various family members. It's a little sporadic in that you have to fill in a lot of gaps, and it's devastatingly grim for most of it, but it came across as rich and authentic. I've seen some reviews that complained about the frequent use of Native American words and a few Spanish ones ... as far as I'm concerned, they added to the novel, not detracted.
Definitely recommended.
Definitely recommended.
This novel is told by an assortment of family members and details the trials of being indigenous in Oklahoma. You get wrapped up in their lives, their flaws, and their successes.
Poignant story. Well-written. I appreciate the cultural insights I gained by reading it.
audio fiction (~7 hrs, read by the author with another narrator)
CW/TW: violence, alcoholism, drug addiction.
intergenerational stories told by multiple characters (with mixed indigenous and Mexican roots), each with their own heartbreaking struggles to contend with, and which, when combined, form a portrait of the life of a man named Ever, his family, and a community.
CW/TW: violence, alcoholism, drug addiction.
intergenerational stories told by multiple characters (with mixed indigenous and Mexican roots), each with their own heartbreaking struggles to contend with, and which, when combined, form a portrait of the life of a man named Ever, his family, and a community.
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