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Evil
Corn

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This collection of
hard-edged prose poems takes no prisoners. Louis walks the tightrope between
the sacred and the profane with humor, anger, and compassion, all dispensed
with a startling clarity of vision. These poems, written from 1999 to
2004, derive from Louis's self-imposed exile in the rural deadlands of
southwestern Minnesota.
"Like fresh voices of any era,
Adrian C. Louis's work requires a second look; the poems are often outside
the comfort zone of what is currently stylish or 'in.' He is daring, but
I don't really think he is reckless. He has created a persona, a speaker
who looks squarely at the world and who processes what he sees through
a sensibility that can be gently comic, severely satirical, outrageously
iconoclastic, and sometimes disarmingly self-revealing. The voice, which
sounds so nonchalant and casual at times, always manages a musical intensity.
The way Whitman's voice did. Or Allen Ginsberg's at his best. There is
consistently a wry and forgiving smile curling through even his most cantankerous
poems. Adrian C. Louis is an original and untamable genius." -- Jim
Heynen
"Adrian C. Louis is a one-man
wrecking crew who will change the face of poetry until we all wake up
and honor him. No poet does what he does. No poet attempts what he attempts.
His poetry is everything we were educated to turn our backs on because
of the fear of facing American truths. His visions and choice of words
are rhythmic, defiant, and timeless." -- Ray Gonzalez
126 pages
Price: $18.00 paper
ISBN: 0-944024-62-1
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Skins

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Skins caused
considerable debate when first released by Crown Publishers in 1995. This
explosive tale of two brothers—one an alcoholic and the other a rez
cop—is set in the poorest county in America, the Pine Ridge Reservation
in southwestern South Dakota.
The noted American Indian writer
Sherman Alexie has this to say about the book: “Adrian C. Louis
has written a violent and dangerous book about twentieth-century Sioux
Indians. This novel is a complex portrait of racism and brotherhood, sexism
and affection, murder and redemption, alcoholism and laughter. These are
not the simple Sioux of Dances with Wolves. These are not ‘Native’
Americans. These are Indians (yes, Indians) living, dying, and loving
on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. Skins is about
the love between brothers, men and women, parents and children. Believe
me, despite all the pain and because of the pain, this is a love story.”
As Nelson Algren once remarked, you
have to love a place a little before you’ve earned the right to
knock it. Louis’s affection for his America Indian people is obvious
throughout the novel, which is in one sense a ritual purgation—on
many levels—of a legacy attributed to white colonialism, Indian
complicity, Iktomi, and the reptilian side of the human brain. This is
a novel, as James Welch observed, full of “great characters, savvy
humor, and true compassion.”
Adrian C. Louis was born
and raised in Nevada and is an enrolled member of the Lovelock Paiute
tribe. He is a graduate of Brown University, where he also received an
MA in Creative Writing. From 1984 to 1998 he taught at Oglala Lakota College
on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. Louis has worked for and
edited various Indian newspapers including the Lakota Times and
Indian Country Today. He presently teaches at Southwest Minnesota
State University in Marshall, Minnesota, where he directs the creative
writing program.
Republication of this novel coincides
with the August 2002 release of the film Skins, based on Louis’s
novel, starring Graham Greene, directed by Chris Eyre, and distributed
by Firstlook Pictures.
307 pages
$18.00 paper
ISBN 0-944024-44-0
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