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Chargement... Murder on the Red River (édition 2017)par Marcie R. Rendon (Auteur)
Information sur l'oeuvreMurder on the Red River par Marcie R. Rendon
Chargement...
Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. 'Murder On The Red River' is vivid, realistic and beautifully written. It's a personal story of trauma and survival, disclosed around the investigation of a killing. The focus of the storytelling is not on the killing or even on finding the people who did the killing but on immersing the reader into the world of Renee "Cash" Blackbear, a nineteen-year-old Ojibwe woman making her living driving trucks for farmers in the Red River Valley in the 1970s. We get to see the world as Cash sees it. We learn how she deals with the world and what she expects from it and, as she informally investigates the killing of an unidentified Native American man who was a long way from home, we learn about the childhood she had, being shifted from white foster home to white foster home and of the friendship she built with the local Sherriff, the only person who took any real interest in her welfare when she was a child. The first thing we learn about Cash is that she's doing more than surviving. Her mind and her imagination are engaged with the world. We meet her as she walks into a local bar at the end of a long shift and her mind is as much on poetry as it is on the drinks she'll soon be winning as she dominates the pool table in the bar she thinks of as her evening home. Here are the opening paragraphs: "Sun-drenched wheat fields. The refrain ran through Cash's mind as she pulled open the Cashah's screen door. She stood still. Momentarily blinded, she waited for her eyes to adjust to the darkened barrio,. Outside, the sun rested on the western horizon Inside the Casbah it was always night. The wooden door thunked behind her. The bar smells- stale beer, cigarette smoke, sawdust and billiard chalk- welcomed her to her evening home. Sun-drenched wheat fields, healing rays of god's love wash gently over me. Cash didn't like the word god. Even in her own mind it was written in lowercased letters. What had he ever done for her? Sun-drenched wheat fields, healing rays of sun's love... nah, didn't work. Healing rays of god's love- now thatworked." I loved this storytelling style. It was immersive, visual and emotional. There is no separation between Cash and the story. The plot isn't just character-driven, the plot exists only as the trellis that the vine of Cash's personality blossoms on. There is a plot and it's a good one. It shows not just how a native man from a long way away might come to be killed but how the people who did it might be fairly sure that they'd get away with it. I liked that the killing and killers are treated as part of the landscape of Cash's world, as expected as a sunrise and as unsurprising as a familiar horizon. Cash throws her energy into solving the crime but not because she has a need to solve a puzzle or because she wants to be at the centre of the action but because this killing and these killers are part of her world and she can't let that pass. Cash is tough but not callous. She's angry but she doesn't let that anger consume her. She does what she needs to do and she does it well. Yet she's aware that most of her life is still ahead of her and she's still thinking about what she should do with it, other than drive trucks, play pool and drink a lot of beer. I was completely absorbed by this book. When it ended, it took a while for me to step back out of Cash's world and he way of seeing it. 'Murder On The Red River' was Marcie Rendon's debut novel. It was published in 2017, when she was sixty-five and already recognised as a playwright, a poet and a political activist. I think her maturity and her experience shine through in the novel. 'Murder On The Red River' is a remarkable book and a stunning debut novel. I've already downloaded the second book in the series, 'Girl Gone Missing' (2019) and I'm looking forward to spending more time with Cash. Cash Blackbear is a 19-year-old woman who has spent most of her life being moved from one white foster family to another. It is now 1968; she is independent, almost as tough as she thinks she is, and spends her days doing field work for wheat and sugar beet farmers in her Northern Minnesota homeland. Her nights, she spends mainly drinking beer and playing pool, at which she is good enough to rely on it as a secondary source of income. She also occasionally "helps out" the local sheriff, a man who has taken an interest in her welfare since she was abandoned by her mother at the age of three. A good first entry into what is now a 3 book series featuring this Ojibwe amateur sleuth. The first Cash Blackbear mystery introduces a fascinating character. Renee Blackbear, nicknamed Cash, is a Native American teen who was placed in the foster care system when her mother had a car accident while drunk. She's been moved from one farm family to another all around the Moorhead area. She began working - for Cash - when she was just eleven and emancipated herself from an especially nasty foster home at the age of thirteen with the help of the local sheriff who fills the role of guardian and mentor. Cash's life consists of working on various farms, smoking, drinking beer, and shooting pool. Every once in a while, she gets a vision that helps Sheriff Wheaton solve a crime or two. This latest crime concerns the death of a Native man who had come down from the Leech Lake reservation to earn some cash to help his family through the winter. Her visions lead her to the reservation where she meets his wife and some of his seven kids. Snooping around in the local Fargo-Moorehead bars lets her overhear some guys talking about the guy's death. After another death, this time of a white guy, Cash overhears enough to point Sheriff Wheaton to the bad guys but not before they kidnap her and threaten to murder her. This was a gritty sort of mystery filled with early 70s details including the pervasive prejudice against Native American and the systematic attempts to destroy Native culture. Cash is a victim of it as she spent a childhood separated from her family and in a succession of foster homes very often abusive. I really liked Cash. She was resilient and very bright. But she was also a loner who doesn't form attachments to anyone but Sheriff Wheaton. Without him pushing her to do something with her life beyond farm work, she's content to just drift. I can't wait to read more of Cash's adventures. aucune critique | ajouter une critique
Appartient à la sérieCash Blackbear (1) Prix et récompensesListes notables
Fiction.
Mystery.
HTML: A murdered man in a field. The sheriff needs Cashâ??a twenty-something tough, smart Indian woman with special seeing powers. Cash and Sheriff Wheaton make for a strange partnership. He pulled her from her mother's wrecked car when she was three. He's kept an eye out for her ever since. It's a tough place to liveâ??northern Minnesota along the Red River. Cash navigated through foster homes, and at thirteen was working farms. She's tough as nails, five feet two inches, blue jeans, blue jean jacket, smokes Marlboros, drinks Bud Longnecks. Makes her living driving truck. Playing pool on the side. Wheaton is big lawman type. Maybe Scandinavian stock, but darker skin than most. He wants her to take hold of her life. Get into junior college. So there they are, staring at the dead Indian lying in the field. Soon Cash was dreaming the dead man's cheap house on the Red Lake Reservation, mother and kids waiting. She has that kind of power. That's the place to start looking. There's a long and dangerous way to go to find the men who killed him. Plus there's Jim, the married white guy. And Long Braids, the Indian guy headed for Minneapolis to join the American Indian Movement Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
Discussion en coursAucunCouvertures populaires
Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClassification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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I wouldn't say I enjoyed this book, but I am glad I read it. The ending was compelling. 3/5 stars.
Trigger warnings: racism, hate crimes, alcoholism, murder, and foster abuse ( )