I first started reading Stephen Graham Jones after hearing him do a reading on YouTube. I’ve always had a great deal of respect for Native Americans and his style was so sincere and down to earth that I was immediately drawn in. Jones is now a well-established horror writer. I’ve read a couple of his books and I have a couple more on my shelf, waiting. Mapping the Interior is an early novella that has recently been repackaged and re-released. You get the sense that even established authors have to prove themselves and then people will go back and read what they wrote before becoming somewhat famous. In any case, it’s a haunting story about loss, growing up, and belonging. At least that’s the way I read it.
Junior, the narrator, lives with his mother and younger brother in a modular house, off the reservation. They are just barely getting by, Junior’s father having died and leaving them to live on one modest income. But then Junior, who sleepwalks, sees his dead father in their house. He becomes convinced that his father is victimizing his younger brother, Dino, who has a disability, in order to gain a body again. Meanwhile, the kids at school all pick on Dino and the next door neighbor doesn’t like having Indians living so close. He has mean dogs and an attitude. Tension grows throughout the story as Junior has second thoughts about his father, whose death was never really explained to him. There are some frightening scenes in this short book. And a kind of matter-of-fact sadness.
Jones is a compelling writer. He reminds us that American Indians know very well that they were wronged, but also have little or no recourse to justice. The characters here keep on keeping on because that’s all you can do. The end of the story does have a twist that is wrenching, especially after reading all that Junior has done to help his brother. I read a fair amount about and by indigenous writers—the kinds of things many of those in power would like to ban and deny. The experience of those whose heritage includes being colonized or/and enslaved is very important to know and to hear. These are people who’ve been victimized and their stories need to be told. I’m glad to have discovered this particular book, even as I’m awaiting the time to take on his longer, more recent work. His is a voice worth listening to.
