![]() She makes a copy of the picture and sends it in a package to Lipsha, who is living in Fargo, North Dakota and working at a sugar beet factory. The story begins with Lulu Lamartine, Lipsha's grandmother, walking to the post office and removing the wanted poster of her son, Gerry Nanapush, from the wall. The Bingo Palace alternates between two narrators, Lipsha and presumably the tribal spirits who watch over Lipsha. This book is the fourth in the series, followed by Tales of Burning Love, The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse, Four Souls, and The Painted Drum. Published in 1994, the narrative is categorized under the romance genre, although it includes themes of tradition and spirituality. The Bingo Palace primarily follows Lipsha Morrissey, the story's protagonist, as he returns from life in the city to his home on the reservation and becomes reconnected to his spiritual and cultural roots while pursuing a new love interest. In The Bingo Palace, American novelist Louise Erdrich writes in the same vein as her previous fiction books in the Love Medicine series- Love Medicine, Tracks, and Beet Queen-which document the complex realities of daily life on a fictional Chippewa, or Ojibwe, reservation in North Dakota. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |