Louise Erdrich, Native American writer: 'No one is illegal; we all have the same right to exist' [View all]
https://english.elpais.com/culture/2026-04-19/louise-erdrich-native-american-writer-no-one-is-illegal-we-all-have-the-same-right-to-exist.html
Louise Erdrich, Native American writer: No one is illegal; we all have the same right to exist
One of Americas most admired novelists, she owns a bookstore in the heart of the Minneapolis protests against Trump. In 2024, she published The Mighty Red
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Minneapolis - APR 19, 2026 - 00:00 EDT
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Birchbark Books in Minneapolis is one of those wonderful bookstores across the United States that ask their employees to recommend titles. The difference is that, at Birchbark, one of the recommenders who signs her slips of paper as Louise is more than just a reader with good taste. Louise is actually Louise Erdrich, 71, a leading voice in Native American literature and one of the most admired writers in the country.
On a recent visit to the bookstore, Erdrichs picks included a story about the 2016 Standing Rock uprising against the construction of an oil pipeline in North Dakota (it didnt stop the pipeline, but it did spark a generational awakening) and Kiran Desais The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny (2025). What Desai does in that novel isnt easy, Erdrich points out.
The Minnesota-born novelist belongs to the club of writers from Saul Bellow, to Colson Whitehead, to John Updike who have won both of Americas top literary prizes: the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the National Book Award for Fiction. In her case, she won the first for The Night Watchman (2020) and the latter for The Round House (2012).
In one corner of her bookstore, which also sells crafts and jewelry from Indigenous communities, theres a wall displaying those two award-winning titles and the rest of her works, including The Mighty Red (2024), her latest novel.
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