Rugaroo Savage Spirit Review

Rugaroo Savage Spirit
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I picked this book up for the first time in college when I was suggested it by a good friend. The characters and storyline immediately intrigued me, as they paint a vivid picture in one's mind. I found myself taking the book with me to class and reading throughout my lectures, just dieing to see how it ended. I have since passed the book on to countless friends who then continue to pass it to their friends with rave reviews. Myerchin has captured a culture and time in our history that he is able to present both intellectually and in an exceptionally entertaining manner. Though not my norm, I have since read this book over again, enjoying it just as much as the first time. Truly, 'The Rugaroo' is as fantastic novel that I would recommend to all.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Rugaroo Savage Spirit

In 1988, a crumbling personal diary is unearthed near an Indian Reservation in North Dakota. The weathered pages reveal disturbing insights into the author's guilt-ridden mind.The journal, written by James Johansen in 1966, details his brief stay on a desolate Reservation. James is a middle-aged psychologist recruited from East Los Angeles who becomes too intrigued with the disjointed stories of a young Indian woman who appears at the door of his primitive two-room Counseling Center.The young woman, Mara, draws him into her stories about the native spirits and offers to reveal the source of her troubling dreams. She leads him to the Rugaroo, the terrifying spirit that promises understanding and control over the weak.'Bonne Homme', an old Chippewa gentleman, urges James to change the direction of his journey before it becomes impossible.The journal also allows the reader to share the touching relationship between the desperate psychologist and a warm and caring nurse from the Public Health Service. Barbara Lonepine is the beautiful Sioux Indian who gently tries to pull James away from his compulsion with the spirit that fills his tormented dreams and his tortured waking hours.The disintegrating document lays bare a journey that James Johansen begins with innocent fascination. The childlike fascination slowly becomes an obsession that compels him toward a path of awful destruction.These moldy pages pulled from the earth allow us to understand how the Rugaroo is an allegory of the human collective unconscious.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Rugaroo Savage Spirit

0 comments:

Post a Comment