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The Sentence is Dead Serious About Books
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The Sentence is Dead Serious About Books

Louise Erdrich's sly humor kills.

Jan 20, 2024
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The Sentence is Dead Serious About Books
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Pulitzer Prize winning author Louise Erdrich’s The Sentence, published in 2021, resonates as the tuning fork for the list of books I curated in response to January’s provocation to read a book that hinges on someone pretending to be something they’re not. Both The Sentence and Yellowface feature a white character who deliberately steals a racial trauma narrative and uses it to shore up a false identity. Each features a character who echoes the author’s life, serving as the narrator’s complement and a vehicle for humor. And both start off with a ridiculous death, setting off hijinks and consequences for a narrator with poor impulse control.

To wit: The Sentence’s Tookie allows a crush to persuade her to commit a madcap body theft, resulting in a sixty-year sentence for her non-violent crime. While isolated following a breakdown in prison, Tookie discovers she can remember all the books she’s ever read. Back among the population, she reads everything available—knitting instructions, the …

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