Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Ledfeather

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Cover artist
  
Jacket design by

Publication date
  
August 8, 2008

Originally published
  
8 August 2008

Genre
  
Novel

Country
  
United States of America

4.1/5
Goodreads


Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print (Paperback)

Author
  
Stephen Graham Jones

Publisher
  
Fiction Collective Two

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Pages
  
216 pp (first edition, paperback)

Followed by
  
The Long Trial of Nolan Dugatti

Preceded by
  
The Long Trial of Nolan Dugatti

Similar
  
Stephen Graham Jones books, Novels

Ledfeather is a 2008 novel by Native American author Stephen Graham Jones, published by FC2 (Fiction Collective Two).

Contents

Plot summary

A young Blackfoot man discovers the 1883 letters of an Indian Agent, whose decisions have "impacted the lives of generations of Blackfeet Indians." As the novel progresses, it is shown that this young man, Doby Saxon, and the Indian Agent may be the same soul inhabiting two separate bodies, and the Indian Agent has been forced to live in the future on the same reservation still plagued by the consequences of his decision.

Characters

Doby Saxon 
a Blackfoot living on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation
Francis Dalimpere 
1883 Indian Agent for the Blackfeet.
Malory Sainte 
Doby's mother.
Claire Dalimpere 
Francis's wife, the recipient of his letters.
Yellow Tail 
1883 Chief for the Blackfeet.
Lead Feather 
a young boy found by Francis, who has attempted to commit suicide.

Motifs

"Cyclical stuff, iterations, rhythm (which is just repetition with variance)—I can’t seem to stay away from it," was the author's comment in a 2008 interview with Rain Taxi online.

Reception

Foreword Reviews described the work as "hallucinogenic lyricism and a nonlinear narrative."

Lit Pub reviewer Edward J. Rathke found the novel to be a remedy for heartbreak: "The next thing I knew, the sun was rising and my heart was breaking, but in a good way, the way that resurrects you, that shows you everything you forgot to pay attention to, forgot to remember, and I closed it because it was done, again, finished for the third time, and I could’ve turned back to page one and began again, which is how the first two readings happened, in consecutive days, because this book burns you, burrows deep, and smolders, lives, reconnects cells, and balances chemistry."

References

Ledfeather Wikipedia