I really enjoy Louise Erdrich novels. There’s something about the way she can take an ordinary task such as peeling potatoes and turn it into something which sounds beautiful and moving that I really love.
I find myself being swept along in waves of poetic language when I read her books but she also portrays real people with real problems and worries.
In this book we follow the lives of Mary and Karl Adare, Celestine, Sita, Wallace and of course the Beet Queen herself – Dot. Louise Erdrich tells a series of stories from a series of points of view; this allows the reader to feel as though they know all the characters intimately and to understand what motivates some of them (although not all, Karl for example always remains somewhat of a mystery to me).
We see Celestine, Mary and Sita growing up and becoming women, we see them facing the hard task of life itself - making money, attracting men, having families, breaking up…And their lives, although nothing dramatic really happens in them, feel so very interesting to the reader. The reader wants all the characters to succeed and do well in life, but of course that would not be realistic and at the end of the book not all the characters are content.
It’s not all doom and gloom though, there are moments of humour and uplifting times too. A wonderful read and one I whole heartedly recommend.