born June 7, 1954, Little Falls, Minn., U.S. in full Karen Louise Erdrich author of Native American ethnicity whose principal subject is the Chippewa Indians in the northern Midwest. Erdrich grew up in Wahpeton, North Dakota, where her German father and Chippewa mother taught at a Bureau of Indian Affairs boarding school. She attended Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire (B.A., 1976), and Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland (M.A., 1979). While at Dartmouth she met writer Michael Dorris (194597), whom she married and collaborated with in writing her novels. Although she published two volumes of poetry, it is her fiction for which she is best known. After her short story The World's Greatest Fisherman won the 1982 Nelson Algren fiction prize, it became the basis of her first novel, Love Medicine (1984; expanded edition, 1993). Love Medicine began a tetralogy that includes The Beet Queen (1986), Tracks (1988), and The Bingo Palace (1994), about the Indian families living on or near a North Dakota Chippewa reservation and the whites they encounter. Erdrich's later novels, Tales of Burning Love (1996) and The Antelope Wife (1998), detail tumultuous relationships between men and women and their aftermath. Erdrich's novels are noted for their depth of characterization; they are peopled by a variety of characters, some of which reappear in several stories. Their contact with white culture invariably brings such elements as alcohol, Roman Catholicism, and government policies to tear down the Indian community; tradition and loyalty to family and heritage work to counteract these forces. Erdrich also wrote short stories and children's stories, including Grandmother's Pigeon (1996), and she and Dorris cowrote the novel The Crown of Columbus (1991). Erdrich's The Blue Jay's Dance: A Birth Year (1995) is a collection of articles, essays, and other nonfiction pieces.
ERDRICH, LOUISE
Meaning of ERDRICH, LOUISE in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012