
That struggle features in the novel, as do kidnapping, hibernation, car pools, boxing and an underwater go-go dancer.Įrdrich: Well that reminds me of ditch skiing, a North Dakota thing.


Senator was trying to “terminate” the tribe, she says, and push its members off the last scrap of land reserved for them. In the 1950s, Gourneau juggled both jobs at a time when a mendacious U.S. Protagonist Thomas Wazhashk, who by night keeps watch in a factory while also tending to the affairs of the Turtle Mountain Band of the Chippewa as tribal chairman, is drawn from Erdrich’s maternal grandfather, Patrick Gourneau. Though much of her fiction is informed by experience- The Master Butcher’s Singing Club features a German immigrant’s butcher shop, like the one her father’s parents owned in Little Falls, Minn.-this is the first book explicitly based on a member of her family. Her new novel T he Night Watchman is in one sense a departure.

Her more recent novels would stand alone, though the last three-Pulitzer finalist The Plague of Doves, The Round House and LaRose-revolved around the theme of justice, and the difficulty Native Americans have faced obtaining it. They came back over and over,” Erdrich says by phone from Minneapolis, where she owns Birchbark Books. “The early novels, I couldn’t stop writing about certain characters.
