The Round House by Louise Erdrich
Thirteen-year-old Joseph Coutts lives on an Ojibwe reservation in North Dakota with his tribal judge father and his mother, Geraldine. Life is pretty ordinary until his mother is brutally raped and beaten. Geraldine remains quiet about the attack and descends into a dark depression, while legal aspects of her case make it difficult to bring the perpetrator to justice. Progress remains slow, so Joe, with the help of three friends, takes it upon himself to find the assailant with tragic results.
Review from Publishers Weekly Starred:
Erdrich, a Pulitzer Prize finalist, sets her newest (after Shadow Tag) in 1988 in an Ojibwe community in North Dakota; the story pulses with urgency as she probes the moral and legal ramifications of a terrible act of violence. When tribal enrollment expert Geraldine Coutts is viciously attacked, her ordeal is made even more devastating by the legal ambiguities surrounding the location and perpetrator of the assault—did the attack occur on tribal, federal, or state land? Is the aggressor white or Indian? As Geraldine becomes enveloped by depression, her husband, Bazil (the tribal judge), and their 13-year-old son, Joe, try desperately to identify her assailant and bring him to justice. The teen quickly grows frustrated with the slow pace of the law, so Joe and three friends take matters into their own hands. But revenge exacts a tragic price, and Joe is jarringly ushered into an adult realm of anguished guilt and ineffable sadness. Through Joe’s narration, which is by turns raunchy and emotionally immediate, Erdrich perceptively chronicles the attack’s disastrous effect on the family’s domestic life, their community, and Joe’s own premature introduction to a violent world.