My library button
  • Book cover of Extrasensory Deception
  • Book cover of The Light People
    Gordon Henry

     · 2003

    The Light People is a multi-genre novel that includes a series of nested stories about a tribal community in Northern Minnesota. Major themes include Oskinaway’s search for his parents and the legal wrangling over the possession of a leg that has been removed from a tribal elder. Each story is linked to previous and successive stories to form a discourse on identity and cultural appropriation, all told with humor and wisdom. Taking inspiration from traditional Anishinabe stories and drawing from his own family's storytelling tradition, Gordon Henry, Jr., has woven a tapestry of interlocking narratives in The Light People, a novel of surpassing emotional strength. His characters tell of their experiences, dreams, and visions in a multitude of literary styles and genres. Poetry, drama, legal testimony, letters, and essays combine with more conventional narrative techniques to create a multifaceted, deeply rooted, and vibrant portrait of the author's own tribal culture. Keenly aware of Eurocentric views of that culture, Henry offers a "corrective history" where humor and wisdom transcend the political. In the contemporary Minnesota village of Four Bears, on the mythical Fineday Reservation, a young Chippewa boy named Oskinaway is trying to learn the whereabouts of his parents. His grandparents turn for help to a tribal elder, one of the light people, Jake Seed. Seed's assistant, a magician who performs at children's birthday parties, tells Oskinaway's family his story, which gives way to the stories of those he encounters. Narratives unfold into earlier narratives, spinning back in time and encompassing the intertwined lives of the Fineday Chippewas, eventually revealing the place of Oskinaway and his parents in a complex web of human relationships.

  • Book cover of Thank You, Stranger
  • Book cover of Geology of Arenac County
  • Book cover of The Failure of Certain Charms
    Gordon Henry

     · 2007

    This is a poetically charged work of autobiographical retrospection, speculative memory and an artistic alternative to common constructions of identity. The influences include traditional songs, ceremonial undercurrents, dream vehicles, disparate landscapes, chemical vapors, relative longings and belief in the possibility of healing again and again even after death. Some works herein are water-source clear, some are abstract meditative breaths, some are ironic dialogues with memorial humor and some are attempts to tease characters out into the open. This collection is held together by relatives, fragments, an undeniable belief in the creative force of even the slightest wisp of memory.

  • Book cover of The Orientation and Navigation of Alligators
  • Book cover of Upper Room Discourse

    This book seeks to answer questions such as: "What are the thoughts going through the mind of the Lord Jesus Christ as He prepares for His exodus?" and "What are the thoughts going through the minds of the Eleven as they conceptualize life without the presence of the one person who has changed their lives and given them an excitement never known before?" There are fifteen studies and a section on how to start a prayer seminar at the end of the book.

  • Book cover of The Model Prayer
  • Book cover of Writer & Critic
  • Book cover of Radical and Coradical Theory in Monoidal Categories