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Ceremony - Community Reviews back

by Leslie Marmon Silko
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Sheila's Reads
Sheila's Reads rated it 6 years ago
Told from Tayo's point-of-view. He is a Native American who, along with his cousin, goes off to fight in Southeast Asia during WWII. When he returns home, he is suffering from PTSD. The story switches time periods from before the war growing up, during the war, after the war. Some of his friends...
This, that, and the other
This, that, and the other rated it 6 years ago
He could see the story taking form in bone and muscleAfter reading a few Sherman Alexie books a few years ago, Leslie Marmon Silko’s Ceremony started popping up in my suggestions, and for some reason, I thought it was poetry rather than a novel. Once I read the description, I put it on my wishlist, ...
This, that, and the other
This, that, and the other rated it 6 years ago
He could see the story taking form in bone and muscleAfter reading a few Sherman Alexie books a few years ago, Leslie Marmon Silko’s Ceremony started popping up in my suggestions, and for some reason, I thought it was poetry rather than a novel. Once I read the description, I put it on my wishlist, ...
Chris Blocker
Chris Blocker rated it 8 years ago
On one hand, Ceremony is a well-told tale and an intriguing story. It is the kind of story that hasn't been told enough and so needs to exist. On the other, Ceremony is a cerebral read that feels slightly inauthentic and is arranged in a jarring manner (flashbacks galore) that makes the story diffic...
Summer Reading Project, BookLikes Satellite
Ceremony, by Leslie Marmon Silko, is hugely confusing but full of wisdom for readers who can slow down long enough to absorb it—which means that I probably missed a lot of what this book had to tell me. I have a feeling, though, that one reading, even for slower readers, is not enough for this tale ...
The Bookchemist
The Bookchemist rated it 12 years ago
Video review:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c6J95yTSIS0
Traveling Through Pages
Traveling Through Pages rated it 12 years ago
*2.5*I had to read this for school, so I was not very excited to read it. I enjoyed the beginning, but I felt like it got really boring throughout the middle and end. I liked the characters, and the messages and themes were powerful, but I just could not get into it.
A Book and A Review #2
A Book and A Review #2 rated it 13 years ago
I thought this was an ok read. Very reminiscent of a lot of reads from that period of time (60's/70's).Although, I found a chunk of the story interesting, I found that I was really unable to warm up to the characters, as a result of the poetry in the book, which in my humble opinion was highly distr...
My Reading Life
My Reading Life rated it 14 years ago
Native American myth and magic intertwine with a young man's return from a Japanese internment camp. Tayo is searching for his past, present, and future while he heals. The power of storytelling. Terrific book.
narfna
narfna rated it 14 years ago
This book always makes me feel small and dirty. And then at the end it makes up for it, makes me feel big and wide and wonderful. But mostly it makes me feel the first thing.
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