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GARDENS IN THE DUNES: A Novel
 
 

GARDENS IN THE DUNES: A Novel (Hardcover)

~ Leslie Marmon Silko (Author) "SISTER SALT called her to come outside..." (more)
Key Phrases: mestizo brothers, citron cuttings, black gladiolus, Sister Salt, Grandma Fleet, Aunt Bronwyn (more...)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)


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  Hardcover, April 5, 1999 -- $3.50 $0.02
  Paperback, April 12, 2000 $11.25 $5.55 $1.41

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

In 1900 the West was still wild. Anglo-Americans were tearing up the countryside in the name of progress, and pity the Indians who stood in the way. To this canvas Leslie Marmon Silko, author of such well-received novels as Almanac of the Dead and Ceremony, brings her brush. Gardens in the Dunes begins and ends at a hidden garden near the Colorado River on the California-Arizona border. But Silko covers ground that includes the early stages of women's rights, emerging female sexuality, the rape of the Amazon, early quack medicine, Gnostic mysteries, Celtic magic, and flower husbandry. Her palette has many colors, but everywhere the garden is a central theme.

Grandmother Fleet, one of the few remaining Sand Lizard Indians, tends a traditional desert garden while teaching the old ways to her granddaughters Sister Salt and Indigo. At a time of crushing hopelessness, Wovoka's Ghost Dance messianic movement appears, drawing in the girls and Grandmother Fleet:

While the others danced with eyes focussed on the fire, Indigo watched the weird shadows play on the hillsides, so she was one of the first to see the Messiah and his family as they stepped out of darkness into the glow of swirling snowflakes. How their white robes shined!
Indigo is also one of the first to sense the approach of soldiers and Indian police bent on breaking up the gathering. The action then moves her from the secret garden and small family to an Indian school in Riverside. She eventually flees the school and ends up traveling through Europe with an aristocratic Victorian family, as companion to an unmarried woman. Despite her many adventures and her exposure to a life of privilege and luxury, Indigo never loses her affinity for the traditions of her own people. Silko uses this novel to explore contrasts between Native American and European customs and morals--with white culture often coming up short. On occasion this ambitious novel strays into the political proper, but there's no denying the sheer force of Silko's prose and the sweep of her story. Gardens in the Dunes offers both a vivid portrait of 19th-century Native American life and a provocative exploration of disparate cultures' relationships to the world around them --Schuyler Ingle


From Publishers Weekly

Silko (Almanac of the Dead, etc.) is widely considered a master of Native American literature, but in this third novel, as always, the poet, short-story writer and essayist soars beyond the simpler categorizations that might circumscribe her virtuosic and visionary work. Indigo is one of the last Sand Lizard people, who for centuries have cultivated the desert dunes beyond the river. Young Indigo's story opens like a folk tale, outside place and time, but gradually circumstances become plain. It's the turn of the century, Arizona is on the verge of statehood and an aqueduct is being constructed to feed water from the Colorado River to Los Angeles. Displaced peoples strip the desert gardens, and Grandma Fleet takes Indigo and Sister Salt to Needles. There the girls' mother has joined the encampment of women dancing to summon the Messiah, who, to Indigo's wonderment, appears with his Holy Mother and his 11 children. Soldiers raid the celebration; soon Indigo and Sister Salt are captured and separated, and Indigo is sent to school in Riverside. She escapes and is found hiding in a garden by intellectual iconoclast Hattie, who adopts the child and takes her first to New York, then to Europe. The novel, expanding far beyond its initial setting and historical themes, is structured around intricate patterns of color and styles of gardening: the desert dunes are pale yellow and orange; in Italy, a black garden is formed from thousands of hybrid black gladioli. Significantly, there's also a parrot named RainbowAalong with a monkey named Linnaeus and a dog circus. Silko's integration of glorious details into her many vivid settings and intense characters is a triumph of the storyteller's art, which this gifted and magical novelist has never demonstrated more satisfyingly than she does here.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 480 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster; First edition. edition (April 6, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0684811545
  • ISBN-13: 978-0684811543
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.5 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #993,880 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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GARDENS IN THE DUNES: A Novel
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Customer Reviews

22 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (22 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Found Treasure, March 11, 2000
While on a camping trip, I settled into this amazing book. Still can't quite identify it -- is it a Botany book? a social treatise? travel book? feminist tract? religious thesis? history book? Visually stunning: the well dressed little Indian with the parrot on her shoulder and the monkey holding her hand; ancient stones and mists of Bath; lusty sun soaked gardens of Italy; the clay painted Indian dancers; a hammock on a boat in the Amazon; the high spirited Hattie; the self-absorbed Edward; all the magnificent gardens -- how on earth does Silko make the transitions in such a believable manner? Yes, of course, the author has an agenda, and magically shows us a version of what she considers important. Mamalinda believes this book is best enjoyed beside a body of water, settling into the trees or by the light of the campfire, and crawling into and living within this masterpiece... and Mamalinda will be looking for the author's other books!
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A mature Silko sends us back to European wisdom tradition., July 18, 1999
By A Customer
Review: Gardens in the Dunes by Leslie Marmon Silko

When Leslie Marmon Silko advised Gary Snyder not to look to native American traditions for his poetry, her anger was justified. Garden in the Dunes, Silko's latest work in hardback, may represent the author's mature outlook, synthesizing native and European traditions in one fascinating work which, nevertheless, carries her earlier message. Documenting the horrors of Western European culture as they manifest in the culture of the United States at the end of the nineteenth century, Silko manages to send Hattie, her Caucasian heroine, back to Europe, much as Hawthorne sends Pearl in The Scarlet Letter. Indigo, the child heroine of the novel, encounters everything from a cruel episode recalling D. H. Lawrence's Lady Chatterly's Lover in the northeastern United States to manifestations of early goddess figures in an Italian black garden. The latter are most recognizable to the child as emblems of her own Sand Lizzard culture, one related to but independent of other Southwest Indian cultures. Silko's condemnation of greedy white males is balanced by Hattie's abortive attempt to bring forth a thesis on the heresies of Southern France, particularly that related to Mary Magdalene. Eventually, Hattie pays the price for her naivete, though she has educated Indigo in the process, loving her and receiving affection from the child in return. More clearly organized and faster paced than Almanac of the Dead, Gardens in the Dunes provides readers with an intriguing, web-like tale of a host of characters, Messianic traditions involving the Ghost Dance, and Biblical symbolism of the Garden of Eden. Lyrical descriptions of gardens, natural plant life, and wide-ranging, episodic action make this poetic book a page-turner, especially for readers who savor fine writing. Thematic motifs of Silko's other works, including the rape of the land and its inhabitants, resonate with Silko's earliest novel "Ceremony." Evil is still at work, though it isn't always the European culture that manifests it. Witchery akin to that witnessed by Lecha in Alaska in "Almanac," a manifestation of the covert 500 year's war waged by native peoples against Europeans, and by Tayo in World War II's wounded, robs characters of life and humanity as they pursue ill-gotten gains. Hattie's husband is too busy trying to recoup his fortune to serve the goddess, as his wound suggests he should have been doing. The real and symbolic impotence of Hattie's marriage drives home root causes, having and gettting, resulting in 50% divorce rates in our time. The adventures of Indigo's monkey and parrot provide comic relief as well as commenting upon the actions of the characters. But, the return of the serpent to the pool in the dunes drives home the allegorical nature of Silko's narrative. A dramatic read, Garden in the Dunes is a classic, for its structure, range of characters, archetypal symbolism, and indictment of what ails us at the turn of the millennium. Leslie Marmom Silko points us in the right direction with beautiful prose, telling European Americans to examine our traditions for the heretical truths and healing to be found therein. She asks us to explore our European gardens while giving us the gift of parallel truths common to all inner traditions. Like Snyder, we need to integrate and balance our lives by restoring European goddess wisdom, avoiding paths of greedy cultural or ecological insensitivity that bring disaster.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gardens in the Dunes is a masterpiece, October 7, 1999
By A Customer
This new novel by Leslie Marmon Silko is a masterpiece. Silko has written another wonderful book about Native Americans, but at the same time we can read the history of Western civilization following the story of these gardens and plants. The prose is always original, intense, lyrical.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Old-fashioned read with contemporary overtones
I just finished this book in a marathon reading stint yesterday and found it a delightful read. Taking place around the turn of the century and interweaving the lives and stories... Read more
Published 8 months ago by Jessica Hazlewood

5.0 out of 5 stars Gardens in the Dunes
well worth the buy at first its a little choppy because the author jumps back from character to charcter but its gets better as the book goes on !
Published 21 months ago by Nicolette Mirabal

2.0 out of 5 stars If I wanted a lecture....
This book seemed to bring me straight back to my days of trying to absorb hundreds of pages of notes in my college Botany classes. Read more
Published on September 14, 2005 by J. Hayter

5.0 out of 5 stars Enchanted Gardens, Lush and Vivid botanical descriptions
I loved this novel because of its vivid descriptions of plant life and gardens. I live in an urban environment and flowers, trees, colors and scents are not part of my daily... Read more
Published on October 24, 2003 by Barbara

5.0 out of 5 stars IMMENSE STORY
Silko's novel is fascinating. Its continent-leaping plot begins and ends with the simplistic lives of the "sand lizard" Indians of the southwest. Read more
Published on May 8, 2001 by Tim Peeler

3.0 out of 5 stars fascinating but not up to Silko's previous books
"Gardens in the Dunes" covers a lot of territory, most of it new--for example, one subplot concerns botanical theft (uprooting specimens of a particular orchid species... Read more
Published on April 4, 2001 by solange

5.0 out of 5 stars Great storytelling and an intersting glimpse of history...
Silko carries on her tradition of producing excellent literature in a Native American "bent" with "Gardens...". Read more
Published on March 26, 2001 by Yuri Kuzyk

2.0 out of 5 stars On and On...where's the editor when you need one
First, I'm a fan of LMS. That's why I'm critical of this work. It read like it was often restarted with only little effort to avoid repeating itself, then put away,and so on and... Read more
Published on February 16, 2001 by Edward A. McCool

5.0 out of 5 stars Evocative Sense of Place
I am really astonished at the low sales rank for this lyrical and beautifully written novel. Silko's feel for the spirit of place is acute. Read more
Published on September 20, 2000 by cathcanada@hotmail.com

4.0 out of 5 stars Overall, a great read
Overall I liked this book very much. Lush, breath-taking descriptions of the Sand Lizard people and their world, and its contrast to the greed of the white world. Read more
Published on March 5, 2000 by Marianne

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