![]() Louise Erdrich’s latest novel, The Sentence, asks what we owe to the living, the dead, to the reader and to the book. ![]() ![]() This means that if you choose to purchase, I’ll make a small commission.) The Sentence Synopsis We’ve also culled a few books from Tookie’s recommended reading as our recommendation for your next great read. Start with the synopsis below, does it begin to describe the complexity of the novel? Then use our discussion questions for The Sentence, along with some thought-provoking review snippets to get the conversation started. And this guide is meant to help you get started with our The Sentence book club questions. But discussing how all of these threads weave together (or don’t) will give you fodder for a great conversation. ![]() Pick any one of those threads and you could have a good book group conversation. She’s packed in a ghost story, a redemption story, notes on the value of family (whether by blood or choice), cultural appropriation, the BLM movement and the melancholy of the COVID shutdown. ![]() What Louise Erdrich has accomplished with The Sentence is far more that your typical cozy bookshop novel. ![]()
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