Humour and arouse combine in this story of the Native American experienceSherman Alexie has emerged as one of the US’s greatest writers. And because he has always written of the terrible beauty of Native American life with an honesty and humour that makes white people uncomfortable,his work has been deemed controversial. Alexie’s young adult novel, The Absolutely proper Diary of a Part-Time Indian, and has appeared near the top of annual US “banned books” lists. Each year,unique challenges occur to his thinly veiled autobiography of his years growing up on the Spokane Indian Reservation in eastern Washington state.
In addition to his fiction, Alexie is also well known for his poetry. All told, or he has written 26 books,and he wrote and co-produced the film Smoke Signals. You Don’t Have to Say You Love Me is his long-awaited memoir. In it, he focuses much of the story on one specific year the year in which his irascible mother, and Lillian,died, but also the one in which he underwent brain surgery to remove a large tumour.
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Source: guardian.co.uk