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The Mask Maker (American Indian Literature and Critical Studies Series)
 
 
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The Mask Maker (American Indian Literature and Critical Studies Series) [Hardcover]

Diane Glancy (Author)

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Book Description

American Indian Literature and Critical Studies Series March 15, 2002

In The Mask Maker, Diane Glancy tells the story of Edith Lewis, a recently divorced mixed-blood American Indian, as she travels the state of Oklahoma teaching students the art and custom of mask-making. A complex, subtle tale about f1esh-and-blood human beings, this enchanting novel shows how one woman copes with alienation, loss, and questions about identity and, in the end, rediscovers meaning in living.

Through Edith's daily life and efforts to teach, Glancy explores the power of the mask and mask-making. When Edith tries reaching out to a listless, alienated student, she knows enough to ask, "Where would you want to go?" He replies, "Nowhere," to which she responds with the advice, "Then make a mask to take you nowhere."

For Edith, masks go beyond the limitations of words and surface gloss. "A mask is a face when you have none," she reflects. Yet some stories need to be confronted, so Edith struggles with the question of how to use masks to tell stories without using words.

Glancy's Edith is no idealized sage but a very human character struggling as best she can while enduring clueless officials and teachers. When Edith explains to one teacher how the art of mask-making reaches students on a creative, intuitive level, she is chided as impractical: "We're supposed to reach them through math and English."

In The Mask Maker, Glancy provides the reader with intriguing new ways of looking at identity, at language, at intangible values, and at love. This captivating novel on the human need for self-expression will delight readers of all ages.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

A Native American woman with a mixed heritage uses the art of mask making to try to reconstruct her identity after a difficult divorce in this third novel by Clancy (Firesticks), an unconventional but one-dimensional book that picks up protagonist Edith Lewis as she lands a part-time job traveling to an Oklahoma public school to teach her craft. Lewis's interest in masks goes far beyond her profession, as the art of making them becomes her way of relating to the world after she splits up with her husband, Bill, and finds herself frustrated, angry and adrift at her loss and her inability to find a place for herself in the world. The novel alternates between problematic interludes at school and scenes with Lewis at home in Pawnee with her erstwhile boyfriend Bix and her two sons, with virtually every aspect of each scene processed according to Lewis's ability to transform the interaction into an appropriate mask. It's fascinating to watch Clancy build an entire novel around her protagonist's ability to use masks to deal with every facet of her life, from Lewis's job problems and her struggles to successfully integrate a man into her life to issues involving character and spirituality. Unfortunately, while the unusual conceit gives Clancy license to explore the implications of masks in daily life, it proves woefully inadequate as a vehicle for an entire novel. She offers a variety of spiritual insights into an intriguing and little-known Native American art form, but there are some major pieces missing most notably a legitimate plot and some well-drawn secondary characters.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

In this experiment by prolific poet, short story writer, and novelist Glancy, prose takes on some of the aspects of poetry. Using the traditional form of the novel, Glancy tells the story of Edith Lewis, a divorced mother and mixed-blood Native American who uses the traditional art form of the mask both to hide her feelings and to come to grips with them. Off to the side of nearly half the pages, Glancy quotes poetry and the Bible or offers Edith's internal dialog and reminiscences. Given the page layout, the reader is never quite sure when to read these passages, and each reader will experience them quite differently. This technique may annoy some readers, but far from being disruptive, it is truly dynamic, revealing inner action simultaneously with outer action. This is a short novel, easily read, but its themes of community and alienation, hiding and revealing, leave the reader with much to ponder. Recommended for all literature collections, especially those emphasizing Native American literature and women's studies. Debbie Bogenschutz, Cincinnati State Technical & Community Coll., OH
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Edith was a mask maker. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
house mask, mask maker, making masks, art room, one mask
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Bill Lewis, Pawnee Bill, Principal Potifar, Arts Council, Hershey Kiss, Oklahoma City, Eisenhower High School, Pawnee Hardware, Bill Bixell, Dothan's Cafe, Pawnee Agency, Mount Scott, Fort Sill, Holder of Heaven, The Maskalator, Edith Lewis, Pawnee Weekly, Stone Giants, Black Bear Creek, Chapel of Love, Indian Territory
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Books on Related Topics (learn more)
 
Masks of Mexico by Barbara Mauldin
Masks by Laurie Halse Anderson
 

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