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by
Sherman Alexie
Los Angeles Times, April 19 1998
I learned to read
with a Superman comic book. Simple enough, I suppose. I cannot recall
which particular Superman comic book I read, nor can I remember which
villain he fought in that issue. I cannot remember the plot, nor the means
by which I obtained the comic book. What I can remember is this: I was
3 years old, a Spokane Indian boy living with his family on the Spokane
Indian Reservation in eastern Washington state. We were poor by most standards,
but one of my parents usually managed to find some minimum-wage job or
another, which made us middle-class by reservation standards. I had a
brother and three sisters. We lived on a combination of irregular paychecks,
hope, fear and government surplus food.
My father, who is one of the few Indians who went to Catholic school on
purpose, was an avid reader of westerns, spy thrillers, murder mysteries,
gangster epics, basketball player biographies and anything else he could
find. He bought his books by the pound at Dutch's Pawn Shop, Goodwill,
Salvation Army and Value Village. When he had extra money, he bought new
novels at supermarkets, convenience stores and hospital gift shops. Our
house was filled with books. They were stacked in crazy piles in the bathroom,
bedrooms and living room. In a fit of unemployment-inspired creative energy,
my father built a set of bookshelves and soon filled them with a random
assortment of books about the Kennedy assassination, Watergate, the Vietnam
War and the entire 23-book series of the Apache westerns. My father loved
books, and since I loved my father with an aching devotion, I decided
to love books as well.
I can remember picking up my father's books before I could read. The words
themselves were mostly foreign, but I still remember the exact moment
when I first understood, with a sudden clarity, the purpose of a paragraph.
I didn't have the vocabulary to say "paragraph," but I realized that a
paragraph was a fence that held words. The words inside a paragraph worked
together for a common purpose. They had some specific reason for being
inside the same fence. This knowledge delighted me. I began to think of
everything in terms of paragraphs. Our reservation was a small paragraph
within the United States. My family's house was a paragraph, distinct
from the other paragraphs of the LeBrets to the north, the Fords to our
south and the Tribal School to the west. Inside our house, each family
member existed as a separate paragraph but still had genetics and common
experiences to link us. Now, using this logic, I can see my changed family
as an essay of seven paragraphs: mother, father, older brother, the deceased
sister, my younger twin sisters and our adopted little brother..
This is an excerpt from the essay. The complete text of this essay is published in various anthologies and archived with the Los Angeles Times.
Original publication: Los Angeles Times, April 19, 1998, as part of a series, "The Joy of Reading and Writing."
Copyright © 2009 Sherman Alexie | FallsApart Productions - All Rights Reserved
Text may not be reproduced without written permission.
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