Original fire : selected and new poems / Louise Erdrich.
Record details
- ISBN: 0066209862 :
- Physical Description: 158 p. ; 24 cm.
- Edition: 1st ed.
- Publisher: New York : HarperCollins, c2003.
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | Indians of North America > Poetry. |
Available copies
- 1 of 1 copy available at GRPL.

Library Journal Review
Original Fire : Selected and New Poems
Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Well known and respected for her fiction (e.g., Love Medicine), Erdrich is an accomplished poet. With this volume, drawn from two previous collections and including 100 pages of new poems, she presents her first collection in over a decade. The progression of her interests as a poet is evident here and clearly parallels her fiction. Poems from the first collection chronicle her Native American childhood and early schooling, while those from the second rework or invent Native American mythology. The new poems are more rooted in Catholicism and life as a middle-class American, yet they are imbued with an animistic spirit that is part of her heritage. A wonderful series of poems to various saints culminates unexpectedly in "Rez Litany," a tour de force of all the harm done by the church to those on the reservations, including those "who preside now in heaven/ at the gates of the Grand Casino Buffet." After concluding this poem with a plea for protection of "fourteen-year-old mothers," Erdrich moves into the book's final section, on childbirth and mothering, from which the book takes its title. Essential reading for fans of Erdrich's fiction, this volume can be expected to draw poetry readers into the fold.-Rochelle Ratner, formerly with "Soho Weekly News," New York (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Publishers Weekly Review
Original Fire : Selected and New Poems
Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Though a multiply award-winning novelist, Erdrich (Love Medicine, etc.) throughout the 1980s remained committed to verse; poems from Jacklight (1984) and Baptism of Desire (1989) represent her in many anthologies, some of them focused on Ojibwe heritage. This third book of poems begins with Erdrich's earliest work (much of it indebted to Richard Hugo), moves through a series of prose tales about the long-lived potato-trickster Potchikoo, then opens out into a mix of new and old verse. "All graves are pregnant with our nearest kin," Erdrich writes, and many of her poems regard first and last things-motherhood, family, death and mourning-sometimes as mythical universals, sometimes as they take place on reservations or in cold, forlorn small towns, each with its misfit (like "Step-and-a-Half Waleski") and its patron saint (the sarcastic "Rez Litany," the rapt "Seven Sleepers"). "The relentless throat call/ of physical love," and religions designed to deflect it, animate some of Erdrich's new sequences, which incorporate fairy tales, Christian ritual and reservation lore. Though her stark lines owe much (sometimes too much) to Louise Gl?ck, Erdrich's particular landscapes and affiliations, and her way with myths and talismans, ensure that her poems, new and old, retain strengths all their own. (Oct.) Forecast: This volume seems designed to work in tandem with Erdrich's next novel, The Master Butcher's Singing Club, which shares scenes and characters with "The Butcher's Wife," a poetic sequence included here: expect joint reviews, especially in the upper Midwest, where Erdrich makes her home, and runs a bookstore. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

BookList Review
Original Fire : Selected and New Poems
Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Erdrich's fecund poems are seedbeds for her acclaimed novels, a key facet of her work newly revealed in this soul-rocking collection, her first volume of poetry in 14 years. An irrepressible storyteller, Erdrich writes supple and cunning narrative poems about families, lovers, and trickster figures as mischievous in the afterlife as they were in the flesh. Both body and spirit fascinate Erdrich because they are born of and sustained by the life force she calls the original fire. Reflecting on her Ojibwa and European heritages, Erdrich is profoundly sensual, frankly bawdy, and slyly comedic. Deeply attuned to the sacred as it is manifest in everything from sunlight to stones to water to plants and animals, Erdrich grapples with both Native American and Christian beliefs, and the conflicts ignited by the friction between them, in poems of sweet gratitude, voluptuous ecstasy, cutting satire, seething grief, and fiery resolve. I'm wild for everything, writes Erdrich, a poet who is, indeed, open to and inspirited by the radiance and heat, crackle and insistence of life. --Donna Seaman Copyright 2003 Booklist