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Alexandra Fuller was born in England in 1969. In 1972, she moved with her family to a farm in southern Africa. She lived in Africa until her midtwenties. In 1994, she moved to Wyoming.
"A delicately calibrated tuning fork, resonating at a cosmic
pitch...awe-inspiring...This is an ardent, original and beautifully
wrought book." - The New York Times Book Review "Fuller achieves
what every creative writer with political and social concerns hopes
to achieve, where the political issues of her text do not overwhelm
her story with a heavy hand, and yet they are simultaneously a part
of the visible and invisible forces at work on the characters'
journeys. And what journeys they undertake... In telling a story
whose form embraces the Lakota Sioux's philosophies and distinctive
life cycles, Quiet Until the Thaw doesn't just give us an authentic
tale of a Native American people's journey. It offers up a
distinctive view of America, and perhaps even pleas for a new
understanding of how great American novels can be written." - Paste
Magazine "Alexandra Fuller's first novel, "Quiet Until the Thaw,"
is a fearless book. . . with trenchant wit and appropriate rage,
Fuller dodges cliché. "Quiet Until the Thaw" is not so much a
conventional narrative as a progression of vignettes, less a tale
to be read than a chronicle to be heard. The voice of the
storyteller, Fuller's voice -- by turns acerbic, compassionate and
wry -- imprints us almost more than the story she tells. And her
gaze, though narrowly focused on a handful of Oglala Sioux
characters, illuminates much more than their lives. Beyond spanning
relatively large swaths of time, the book covers many physical
territories as well -- from the Rez in South Dakota to Vietnam,
from Paris Disneyland to the moon. And in these snippets of
cultural conquest, it is as much a history of (white) American
capitalism in the 20th century as of a people oppressed by it...An
essential book."-- WBUR's The ARTery "Alexandra Fuller has always
been a brave writer. We count on her bare-boned, carefully-crafted
truths laced with wit and wisdom. But in her debut novel, Fuller
calls upon her imagination to explore what binds us together rather
than what pulls us apart. Quiet Until the Thaw is a literary risk
and a revelation." --Terry Tempest Williams, author of The Hour of
Land "One moment I am crying in sorrow, the next laughing and on
the same page I am cringing. Honest fiction that exposes the
reality of the difficulties of the Lakota Way."
--Richard B. Williams, former president and CEO of the American
Indian College Fund, and member of the Oglala Lakota Tribe
"Fuller's keen sense of engagement with a land 'to which you now
don't belong, ' and her place as an outsider, make her a
sympathetic storyteller. Her prose shimmers and vibrates with life
in this excellent novel." - Publishers Weekly "Beloved for the
string of gorgeous memoirs begun with Don't Let's Go to the Dogs
Tonight, Fuller here depicts the Lakota people of South Dakota's
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, particularly two cousins in
conflict. Fluidly written, with no sanctimony and plenty of dark
humor" - Library Journal "Fuller writes unhurriedly and with an
economy of expression that is nonetheless evocative... what is
explored paints a vivid picture." - Bookpage "Fuller's kinship with
Lakota traditions in this novel is palpable." - Booklist "A lyrical
tale of life on the Rez. . . A tender, wry homage to Native
American wisdom and lore."- Kirkus Reviews
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