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The Master Butchers Singing Club : a novel  Cover Image Book Book

The Master Butchers Singing Club : a novel

Erdrich, Louise (author.).

Summary: Fidelis Waldvogel, a German sniper during WWI, returns home to marry the pregnant widow of his best friend who was killed in action, and seeking a better life moves his family to North Dakota where he sets up a butcher shop, starts a singing club, and battles an attraction to the mysterious Delphine, a performer who has returned to Argus to care for her alcoholic father.

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  • 0 of 1 copy available at University College of the North Libraries.

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Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
The Pas Campus Library PS 3555 .R42 M37 2005 (Text) 58500000808949 Stacks Volume hold In process -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Monthly Selections - #1 December 2002
    /*Starred Review*/ Although death looms large in Erdrich's emotionally powerful, richly detailed new novel, it does so in a "world where butchers sing like angels." The indomitable Fidelis Waldvogel walks home from World War I and marries Eva, the pregnant widow of his best friend, who was killed in combat. Carrying a suitcase full of butcher knives, he immigrates to America and settles in Argus, North Dakota (a fictional town familiar from Erdrich's previous novels). Endlessly resourceful Delphine Watzka has attempted to put Argus and her childhood (devoted to ministering to her father, Roy, a hopeless alcoholic) behind her by joining the circus as a human table for a balancing act. Although she deeply loves her balancing partner, Cyprian, she senses a barrier between them that prevents them from truly connecting. Returning to Argus, she takes a job at Fidelis' butcher shop, where she makes a friend for life in the hardworking Eva, eventually nursing her through a death by cancer and finally finding the love of her life in Fidelis. Erdrich gives us one of her finest characters in the radiant Delphine, who is possessed of an immense generosity of spirit, while also creating a host of truly remarkable secondary characters: loyal Cyprian, mournful Roy, the eccentric ragpicker Step-and-a-Half. In mesmerizing prose, Erdrich meticulously re-creates the brutal work of the slaughterhouse and the lithe grace of the circus troupe and then counterpoints this physical world with transcendent moments of human connection. It's clear that Erdrich, one of our finest writers, is working at the very peak of her considerable powers. ((Reviewed December 1, 2002)) Copyright 2002 Booklist Reviews
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2003 February
    Erdrich's tale of an immigrant's quest

    In beautiful early novels such as Love Medicine and Tracks, Louise Erdrich reckons with the Native-American strain in her own ancestry, interweaving ancient folklore and contemporary life. Now, in The Master Butchers Singing Club, Erdrich pays tribute to the other side of her bloodline. She tells us in the acknowledgements that her grandfather was a butcher who fought on the German side in World War I, and whose sons served on the American side in World War II. Out of this poignant scrap of autobiography arises a grand and generous fiction, Erdrich's most sweeping and ambitious tale yet.

    From the very first page, Master Butchers breathes the air of the Homeric epic, with an irony befitting the modern, godforsaken era in which it is set. Erdrich's Odysseus, the German sniper Fidelis Waldvogel, takes only 12 days to walk home from his war (the Great War). Eva, the woman Fidelis comes home to wed, has not been waiting faithfully for him, but for his best friend Johannes, whose child she carries, and whose death in the war Fidelis must now report to her. With this dark homecoming in 1918, the odyssey really begins.

    Hoping to make a new life with his grieving bride, Fidelis makes the naïve attempt to trace a piece of American bread—whose manufactured perfection astonishes him—back to its source. Fidelis gets as far as Argus, North Dakota, a place so culturally distant from Germany (and so remote from anywhere) that he must start his life almost from scratch. But not entirely: Fidelis has brought sausages with him in his traveling case, sausages as magically effective as any enchanted object in a fairy tale, for they are the most delicious sausages in the world, the pride of generations of master butchers in the Waldvogel family, whose secret art now falls to Fidelis.

    Just as Fidelis and Eva (who joins him in Argus) are displaced Germans who can never fully be at home in North Dakota, so too this American novel must look elsewhere for its center. Fidelis forms a singing club, where he meets the passionate Delphine Watzka, a young woman who becomes the real Odysseus of the novel. Like Homer's hero, she comes home from her travels and sets her ruined father back on his feet again. The Odyssean parallels compound: Delphine faces a terrible "Underworld" of unquiet spirits (in her father's cellar), is detained by a god-like lover with whom there can be no hope of true love (the beautiful acrobat Cyprian), is charmed by a Circe (her childhood friend Clarisse, now the town's undertaker), whose job it is to turn human beings into something else, and must outwit the Cyclopean "Tante," Fidelis' sister, who would "eat" Fidelis' children by taking them back to Germany.

    At the heart of the novel is the friendship between Delphine and Eva, a phenomenon as beautiful, as unlikely and as strangely inevitable as butchers who sing like angels. Delphine loves Eva so luminously, she would do anything for her. In the end, this is precisely what happens.

    Louise Erdrich is always a step and a half ahead of us with her limitless compassion, taking account of all that is most implacable in life, for good or ill, whether it is the love that burns us or the deaths that claim us and those we love.

    Michael Alec Rose teaches at Vanderbilt University's Blair School of Music. Copyright 2003 BookPage Reviews

  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2004 February
    The Master Butchers Singing Club

    Ojibwe author Erdrich continues to chronicle life in North Dakota with her eighth novel, a sprawling historical tale of a German family set in the early 1900s. Fidelis Waldvogel comes home from World War I to marry Eva, the widow of his best friend who died in battle. Together, they make a new life in Argus, North Dakota, where Fidelis works as a butcher and forms a singing club made up of the best male singers in the community. The Waldvogels have four sons, but when Eva falls sick and dies, Fidelis must struggle on without her as a single father. Enter Delphine Watzka, a kind-hearted vaudeville performer who gives the thick-skinned, angel-voiced butcher hope for the future. This is a wonderful story of friendship, family and community, written with wisdom and compassion by Erdrich, whose poetic style perfectly captures the desires, fears and hopes hidden in the human heart. A reading group guide is available in print and online at www.harpercollins.com/readers.

    Copyright 2004 BookPage Reviews.

  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2002 November #2
    Lg. Prt.: 0-06-053327-7cassette 0-06-053293-9The tensions between stoical endurance and the frailty of human connection, as delineated in Erdrich's almost unimaginably rich eighth novel: a panoramic exploration of "a world where butchers sing like angels."It's set mostly in her familiar fictional town of Argus, North Dakota (The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse, 2001, etc.), the eventual destination of Fidelis Waldvogel, a WWI veteran who makes his way from Germany to America, where he prospers as a butcher and is later joined by his wife Eva and her young son (fathered by Fidelis's best friend, fallen in battle). In a wide-ranging narrative, Erdrich counterpoints the tale of this "forest bird" (Fidelis is gifted with an incredibly beautiful singing voice) and his loved ones with the stories of several other sharply drawn figures. Foremost is Delphine, the daughter of Argus's loquacious town drunk Roy Watzka, sunk in sodden unending mourning for his late Indian wife Minnie. Or so it seems-as Delphine comes home to Argus in 1934 accompanied by Cyprian Lazarre, a half-breed (and bisexual) "balancing expert" with whom she has performed in traveling shows, and whom Delphine does and doesn't love, as her chance acquaintance with Eva Waldvogel blossoms into her greatest love: for Fidelis, who long outlives Eva, and his four sons, throughout the later war years and the devastating changes that overtake them all. Delphine is a great character (perhaps Erdrich's most openly autobiographical one?): "a damaged person, a searcher with a hopeless quest, a practical-minded woman with a streak of dismay." And she's the moral center of a sprawling anecdotal story crammed with unexpected twists and vivid secondary characters (the hapless Roy and a ubiquitous rag-picker known as Step-and-a-Half are employed to particularly telling effect), crowned by a stunningly revelatory surprise ending.There are echoes of Steinbeck's East of Eden as well, in a thoughtful, artful, painfully moving addition to an ongoing American saga.Book-of-the-Month Club alternate selection; author tour Copyright Kirkus 2002 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2002 October #2
    A German soldier straggles home from World War I, marries his best friend's pregnant widow, then picks up a set of butcher knives and heads for North Dakota, where he founds a singing club and encounters the passionate Delphine Watzka. If anyone can make a butcher sing, it's Erdrich. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2002 December #1
    As the Depression begins, the sausage king of Argus, ND, is indisputably Fidelis Waldvogel, strong but forever troubled by the horrors that he experienced as a sniper for Germany during the Great War. (He will live to see his sons fight on both sides in World War II.) His greatest comforts, and perhaps his salvation, lie in his magnificent voice and the singing club that he founded. Meetings bring together musical men from all local social strata-the rival butcher, the town drunk, the sheriff, the doctor-quite literally in harmony. Simply listening to them brings temporary peace to troubled souls, such as fascinating (and notorious) Delphine Watzka. A former "human table" in a traveling show, Delphine becomes clerk and best friend to Eva, Fidelis's wife, while trying to ignore the emotional pull that she feels toward the butcher. Extraordinary secrets are hidden within these and other seemingly ordinary townsfolk; in revealing them, the author spins rich tales of violence, desire, deceit, love, and redemption, all set within a finely realized sense of place. Drawing on her German and Ojibwe heritage, Erdrich here offers another stimulating exploration into the human heart that will appeal to old fans and new readers alike. It's not exactly a breakaway, but more of the same from such a good writer is just fine. Recommended for most fiction collections. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 10/15/02.]-Starr E. Smith, Fairfax Cty. P.L., VA Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2002 December #5
    All of the virtues of Erdrich's best works-her lyrical precision, bleakly beautiful North Dakota settings, deft interweaving of characters and subplots, and haunting evocation of love and its attendant mysteries-are on full display in this superb novel. Drawing on her paternal German ancestry, Erdrich tells the story of Fidelis Waldvogel, a WWI sniper and master butcher with a "talent for stillness" and for singing. After marrying Eva, the pregnant fiancée of his best friend, who was killed in the war, he emigrates to America. Settling in Argus, N.Dak., he and Eva establish a butcher shop known for its Old World expertise and for housing Fidelis's beloved singing club. The focus then shifts to Delphine Watzka, a performer in a traveling vaudeville act, who has recently returned to Argus to care for her alcoholic father, Roy. Roy's health problems pale beside his legal problems: the predatory Sheriff Hock is investigating how the Chavers family came to perish in Roy's basement. Not willing to abandon Roy, Delphine and her vaudeville partner, Cyprian Lazarre, a homosexual Ojibwa, set up house in Argus, where Delphine soon befriends Eva and develops a disturbing attraction to Fidelis. Erdrich's plot spans 36 years, covering two world wars, several violent deaths, near-deaths, illnesses, accidents and crimes-"awful things occurring to other humans," but somehow not to Delphine, who draws on reserves of toughness and compassion to sustain herself as well as the surprisingly vulnerable Waldvogel family. Some readers may be disappointed by the trajectory of the Fidelis-Delphine love story, which is consummated without quite the fireworks display Erdrich seems to promise, but many others will be deeply moved by the complicated romance. With its lush prose, jolts of wisdom and historical sweep, this story is as rich and resonant as any Erdrich has told. BOMC alternate selection; 6-city author tour. (Feb. 7) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
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