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On the Rez Hardcover – January 10, 2000
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A great writer's journey of exploration in an American place that is both strange and deeply familiar.
In Ian Frazier's bestselling Great Plains, he described meeting a man in New York City named Le War Lance, "an Oglala Sioux Indian from Oglala, South Dakota." In On the Rez, Frazier returns to the plains and focuses on a place at their center-the Pine Ridge Reservation in the prairie and badlands of South Dakota, home of the Oglala Sioux. Frazier drives around "the rez" with Le War Lance and other Oglalas as they tell stories, visit relatives, go to powwows and rodeos and package stores, and try to find parts to fix one or another of their on-the-verge-of-working cars.
On the Rez considers Indian ideas of freedom and community and equality that are basic to how we view ourselves. Most of all, he examines the Indian idea of heroism-its suffering and its pulse-quickening, public-spirited glory. On the Rez portrays the survival, through toughness and humor, of a great people whose culture has shaped our American identity.
- Print length311 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherFarrar, Straus and Giroux
- Publication dateJanuary 10, 2000
- Dimensions6.75 x 0.75 x 9.5 inches
- ISBN-100374226385
- ISBN-13978-0374226381
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Much of On the Rez revolves around Le War Lance, whom Frazier first met in Great Plains. This yarn-spinning, beer-swilling figure serves the author as a kind of Native American Virgil, introducing him to the hard facts of reservation life. In fact, their friendship, with its accents of deep affection and dependency, anchors the entire narrative and elicits some typically top-drawer prose: Le's eyes can be merry and flat as a smile button, or deep and glittering with malice or slyness or something he knows and I never will. He is fifty-seven years old. I have seen his hair, which is black streaked with gray, when it was over two feet long and held with beaded ponytail holders a foot or so apart, and I have seen it much shorter, after he had shaved his head in mourning for a friend who had died. On the Rez delivers a history of the Oglala nation that spotlights our paleface population in some of its most shameful, backstabbing moments, as well as a quick tour through Indian America. The latter, to be honest, seems a little too conscientiously cooked up from primary sources and news clippings. But elsewhere Frazier is in superb form, reporting everything he sees and hears with enviable clarity and promptly pulling the rug out from under himself whenever he seems too omniscient. Few accounts of reservation life have been this comical; even fewer have moved beyond the poverty and pandemic drunk driving to discern actual, theological wickedness on the premises: "At such moments a sense of compound evil--the evil of the human heart, in league with the original darkness of this wild continent--curls around me like shoots of a fast-growing vine." In the hands of many a writer, the previous sentence might resemble a rhetorical firecracker. In Frazier's, it comes off as a statement of fact--which is only one of the reasons why every American, Native or not, should take a look at this sad, splendid, and surprisingly hopeful book. --James Marcus
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From School Library Journal
Judy McAloon, Potomac Library, Prince William County, VA
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
-ANathan Ward, "Library Journal"
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews
Review
"Reading Frazier, one thinks of such American originals as John McPhee, Wallace Stegner, Edward Hoagland, Peter Matthiessen, and Evan S. Connell."--Ron Hansen, The Washington Post Book World
About the Author
Ian Frazier's books include Coyote v. Acme (FSG, 1996), Family (FSG, 1994), Great Plains (FSG, 1989), and Dating Your Mom (FSG, 1986). He lives with his family in Missoula, Montana.
Product details
- Publisher : Farrar, Straus and Giroux; First Edition (January 10, 2000)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 311 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0374226385
- ISBN-13 : 978-0374226381
- Item Weight : 1.35 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.75 x 0.75 x 9.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #780,290 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,271 in Native American Demographic Studies
- #2,528 in Native American History (Books)
- #26,278 in United States History (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Ian Frazier is the author of Great Plains, The Fish's Eye, On the Rez, and Family, as well as Coyote v. Acme and Dating Your Mom, all published by FSG. A frequent contributor to The New Yorker, he lives in Montclair, New Jersey.
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"`Bleak' is the word attached in many people's minds to the idea of certain Indian reservations, of which the Oglala's reservation is perhaps the best example," he writes on page one. "Oddly, it is a word I have never heard used by Indians themselves." Current accounts of White despoilment of Indians and their way of life, Frazier writes, "can't do justice to the thrilling spark of freedom in the encounter [between the races]--the freedom the Indians had, the freedom that white people found."
In his many visits to the rez, Frazier recognizes something else on the arid hills of southwest South Dakota. "There is greatness here, too, and an ancient glory endures in the dust and the weeds," he tells us. "The way I look it, this is the American bedrock upon which the society outside its borders is only a later addition."
With that launch, Frazier goes on to introduce his long-time Oglala Lakota friend he calls Le, short for Leonard Walks Away. Le, a practicing alcoholic, guides Frazier (and us) from the streets of New York, where he and Frazier meet, to the arid high plains where his people live.
Frazier remarks that the "reservation is dense with stories," and lets Le tell some of them. "In one of them junk cars lives a guy who I ran into years ago in the Dawes County jail," Le says. He points out another place, "That's where we used to gather sweet grass . . . but the tribe put some new houses back there and the sewage runoff killed it off . . ."
In addition to visiting Le, Frazier has done his homework, gathering statistics about reservation Indians. "Especially in western towns that border big reservations, stabbings and fights and car wrecks are a depressingly regular part of life," he writes. "In this part of the country, Indians have an average life expectancy about eleven years shorter than Americans as a whole."
He writes of the second Wounded Knee confrontation and the violent division between the American Indian Movement's followers and the so-called "goons" who wanted the occupation to just go away. After the surrender, he tells us, houses caught fire in the night, shots came through car windows, people usually uncomfortable with guns felt they had to carry them . . ."
After two FBI agents died during the confrontation, the FBI was suddenly all over the place in search of the killers. The Indians wondered why the "recent deaths of Indians by the dozens hadn't produced a similar response."
When Frazier and Le have a near-death experience with a propane bottle, Le just laughs and Frazier gets a little crazy.
"Well, that's the Indian way," Le says, "we'd rather laugh about still being alive than moan about how we almost died."
"So much is wrong on the Pine Ridge," Frazier writes. "There's suffering and poverty and violence and alcoholism, and the aura of unstoppability that repeated misfortunes acquire. Beneath all that is something bigger and darker and harder to look at straight on . . ."
Yet, the Indians produce more heroes than the rest of us, Frazier argues, and they're willing to take credit for their bravery. "There's probably more foreign shrapnel walking around the small towns of the reservation than ... in similar towns anywhere in America," he writes. "some Oglala families can give you a genealogy of warriors that begins at Operation Desert Storm and continues back to the Little Bighorn and before."
Frazier tells the story of a recent Oglala hero, a young girl named SuAnne Big Crow, devoting several chapters to her. "Great good does exist here, too, in the lives of people who hold fast to it and serve their neighbors without much encouragement or reward, and in the steadfastness of the old Oglala culture that endures."
For a glimpse of the lives Pine Ridge Reservation Indians endure, be sure to read Ian Frazier's On the Rez. You'll never think about the Oglala Lakota in the same way again.
Granted, Frazier at times wanders off topic. His digressions, nonetheless, reveal a certain elements of his character, which added even more intrigue to the book. Not trying to represent himself as a disinterested observer and eschewing the stale objective phrasings of an academic, Frazier's character seems to show through like some sort of mellowed out Hunter S. Thompson (Gonzo journalist after a stint in AA, perhaps). His telling of his conflicted relationship with Le War Lance: topic for his book, fitful friend, charity-case/lout-in-need-of-beer-money, brother. The book is part history lesson, part personal memoir, sometime adventure story, at times sweetly saccharin, at times hinting towards an ironic humor that may be more essential than fully revealed. Ultimately, it is readable and it has instilled in me a desire to learn more about American Indian history and modern Indian affairs.





