Reading Circle 57: ‚Solar Storms‘ by Linda Hogan

Podcast
Reading Circle
  • Reading Circle 57: 'Solar Storms' by Linda Hogan
    29:00
audio
28:55 Min.
Reading Circle 72: 'Assembly' by Natasha Brown
audio
29:00 Min.
Reading Circle 71: 'The Latecomer' by Jean Hanff Korelitz
audio
29:00 Min.
Reading Circle 70 'Love After Love' by Ingrid Persaud
audio
29:00 Min.
Reading Circle 69: 'On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous' by Ocean Vuong
audio
29:00 Min.
Reading Circle 68 : Revisiting some of last year's books (3)
audio
29:01 Min.
Reading Circle 67 : Revisiting some of last year's books (2)
audio
29:00 Min.
Reading Circle 66: Revisiting some of last year's books (1)
audio
29:02 Min.
Reading Circle 65 : 'Of Women and Salt' by Gabriela Garcia
audio
29:00 Min.
Reading Circle 64: 'A Complicated Kindness' by Miriam Toews
audio
29:00 Min.
Reading Circle 62: 'Love Marriage' by Monica Ali

‚Solar Storms‘ (1995), by Linda Hogan

„In a novel with the feel of a richly woven pattern, Linda Hogan tells the story of five generations of Native American women in the harsh landscape of the Boundary Waters between Canada and Minnesota. A story of love and family and a parable of the Native American quest to claim a lost way of life, ‚Solar Storms‘ is a story of transformation and lyrical beauty.“ (blurb on back cover)

The central figure, Angel, says: „Scars had shaped my life. I was marked and I knew the marks had something to do with my mother, who was said to be still in the North. While I never knew how I got the scars, I knew they were the reason I had been taken from my mother so many years before.“

A fascinating book! It is a ‚coming-of-age‘ novel, but much more. The main themes are loss, loneliness, alienation, emptiness, the relationship of humans and nature, and the loss of spiritual values.

At the very centre of the book is the canoe journey: a compelling odyssey, a quest, a pilgrimage – striking out into the unknown, achieving self-discovery after a series of identity crises.

Music played:
1. ‚Indian Reservatioin‘, Don Fardon
2. ‚Seminole Wind‘, John Anderson
3. ‚Rocky Mountain High‘, John Denver

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