February 1, 2026
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Titles can’t be copyrighted, so I am using one created by Native American writer, Louise Erdrich. Her piece appeared in The New York Times Book Review of July, 1985. I’ve read it many times, her words matter. Because for writers, it is always about the words, and it is often about the PLACE.…Where You Live and Breathe.
Louise Erdrich writes:
In a tribal view of the world, where one place has been inhabited for generations, the landscape becomes enlivened by a sense of group and family history. …a traditional storyteller fixes listeners in an unchanging landscape combined of myth and reality. People and place are inseparable.
One of my novels takes place in a Northside neighborhood of Chicago, a crowded older area abutting the shores of Lake Michigan, like Rogers Park. I lived there while in college. But writing allows my imagination to alter things, place my Southside house there with all the elm trees that once lined our block, where hopscotch squares filled the sidewalks and my bike was an imaginary pony I rode around familiar city blocks:
She ran, feet slapping on sidewalks, one cement square worn, another fractured with prickly weeds breaking through, the straight-on Chicago blocks of this Near North Side neighborhood. Step on a crack? Break your mother’s back. …Change endemic to living, and it happening here, block after block, street after street, yet the place still familiar, like lines on her palms…
If our characters are formed by place, they can also alter place. Erdrich is right—people and place are inseparable, so many places that were and still are part of my life, my writing.
CHANGE VERSUS IMMUTABILITY
Erdrich’s essay presents a challenge to writers. She asks that we compare her beginnings, her native culture, with our modern one. Because in our culture, if we are not satisfied with the landscape, we eventually use our power to alter it. This despite the fact that the land has always depended on us for protection.
Erdrich writes: As we know, neighborhoods are leveled in a day, the Army Corps of Engineers may change the course of a river. In the ultimate kitsch gesture of culture’s …a limestone mountain may be blasted into likenesses of important men. (Yes, but we must hope that only if those men CARED about America and not just about themselves.)
We need to remember a major aspect of Western culture–its mutability…nothing, not even the land where we live and the work we do stays the same. Erdrich writes: . …it is therefore, as if, in the very act of naming and describing what they love, they lose it.
She supports this thesis using literature, like Faulkner’s “The Bear,” a story set in a wilderness that is doomed to disappear: …”gnawed at by men with plows and axes who feared it because it was wilderness.”
The pioneers felt the need to find the land, name that land and then consume it, tame it, using more and more modern farming methods that did irrevocably change it. When Erdrich states that the course of a river can be changed by the Army Corps of Engineers, she wonders if …our suburbs and suburban life may be more sustaining and representative of monuments than Mount Rushmore.
Though we might all believe we know what a suburb is, each writer’s interpretation challenges a bland interpretation, welcoming readers to the oddity of place, capturing the reader’s attention and sustaining it.
WRITING ROOTS
But there is a true and real challenge in Erdrich’s analysis of American literature…how it considers place: the problem of identity…An author needs his or her characters to have something in common with the reader. If not the land, which changes, if not a shared sense of place, what is it then that currently provides a cultural identity?
Erdrich answers this question by going back to her tribal roots, sharing stories that are part of her heritage, that she first heard in her Tewa language. At the telling of these old stories: we would be lifetime friends…Old people would nod when parts were told…It would be a new story and an old story, a personal story and a collective story, to each of us listening.
Erdrich also quotes Eudora Welty, who begs for some permanence to sustain society and thus our fiction:
It is only too easy to conceive that a bomb that could destroy all traces of places as we know them, in life and through books, and could also destroy all feelings as we know them, so irretrievably and so happily are recognition, memory, history, valor, love, all the instincts of poetry and praise, worship and endeavor, bound up in place. Yes, so true.
The ability to read a poem, watch a film, or see a new clip, would mean more and might stay with us, if there is recognition of PLACE –either that specific place, or in fiction, one that haunts us and brings back memories.
It happens when you are walking in your neighborhood, the sidewalk broken with weeds, the house on the corner familiar. Or you are reading something, your subconscious whispers: Here I am, though I am frightened, or repulsed or angry, or joyful, this is where I want to be.
Erdrich insists that a writer, who is beginning a story, a novel, any work of literature, must create a close study…
…of a place, its people and character, its crops, products, paranoias, dialects and failures…then we come closer to our own reality. It is difficult to impose a story and a plot on a place. But truly knowing a place provides the link between details and meaning. Location, whether it is to abandon it or draw it sharply, is where we start.
Yes, we all start in a place. We often take that place into our hearts when we move, leave our beginnings. But they stay with us. In airplanes we can escape gravity, but when we look down, we cannot escape the need to identify with some place on this earth–a place either big or small that rises up to hold us.
And when it does, we know we belong, somewhere. In a society where people travel widely, or are uprooted, either out of desire or the necessity to survive, writing can reflect a disconnect to place or a strong bond—but always a variety of complicated and emotional relationships to that place…the memory of that place.
When reading fiction, that story world will not resonate, will not hold you, if there isn’t something within the tale that you have already felt or experienced.
Erdrich states: “We can escape gravity itself, and every semblance of geography, by moving into sheer space, and yet we cannot abandon our need for reference, identity or our pull to landscapes that mirror our most intense feelings.”
When you first begin to write, do you have visions of place—a world that can be as big as universe or as small as a single room? Because place is where we begin.