Kernel Essay “Search Engine” and “What Ever Happened to Frank Snake Church” 9/7

In Sherman Alexie’s “Search Engine” and “What Ever Happened to Frank Snake Church” Alexie juxtaposes two people in order to teach one other lessons about themselves and their lives. However, each short story has very different ways of bringing these two people together and different lessons learned from one another about their identity and their family. “Search Engine” brings out what it means to be “Indian” and what it means to be family through Corliss and Harlan while “What Ever Happened to Frank Snake Church” brings out the what it means to accept yourself and to be okay with the events of life with the characters of Frank and Preacher. Though both stories use the same method of bringing two people together to teach one another a lesson about themselves, Alexie takes his readers on different paths to find their identity and how they view themselves. “Search Engine” is more on the deep and darker road to a self-realization that isn’t as bright and happy while “What Ever Happened to Frank Snake Church” is laced with humor and satire of the heavy to get to the finality of being okay.

Sherman Alexie’s “Search Engine” takes readers on through a blip in the life of Corliss who a female Spokane Indian who struggles with who she is, what she’s worth and really what she is doing with her life. She doesn’t know where she belongs and knows that “she wasn’t supposed to be in college and she wasn’t supposed to be as smart as she was” (Alexie 41) all the while not receiving the support she needed from her parents and her tribe. That questioning and persistent personality of hers leads her to Harlan Atwater’s books and evidentially to Harlan Atwater himself. He makes her question herself and how she sees her tribe and her family. He’s a “lost bird” (Alexie 48) but seems to fit in and know what being “Indian” is more than her who’s been a part of the tribe her whole life. She learns more about herself and that she searches for that acceptance she will never get but really she teaches Harlan more about himself than she learns from him. He realizes that the longing to be Indian and to expected lead him to feeling “fake” (Alexie 46) he was being and that the only people who ever made him feel like he was loved and that he belonged were his two white parents.

“What Ever Happened to Frank Snake Church” is a short story plagued by Frank’s need to “reconnect” with his dead parents. Frank Snake Church gave up “something valuable” to honor his mother after she died and brought it back from the dead when his father died. He played basketball in their memory and in vain to be with them again in some way. Through the story Frank deals with the challenges of losing and gaining people, weight and most importantly himself. He goes through stages of grief and mental trauma that eventually leads him to Preacher, a man who would impact his journey in self-realization the most. Preacher looks inside of Frank to show him how foolish he’s being in the way he’s trying to cope and honor his parents but then pretends to that he didn’t look inside and then reveals to Frank that he really isn’t a preacher and that fakeness makes Frank snap. (Alexie 229) Frank Snake Church plays his entire life with humor in order to cope and get to where he needed to be. No matter the situation he used quick humor and a sort of self-deprecation to mask how he was and how he was coping. Through it all he battled a mental illness that’s not named that really he plays less mind to but what it really takes for him to get to the point of self-acceptance is a physical injury while playing basketball. He wrecks his knee and the physical pain that comes with it brings him to accepting that he may never play basketball again and that with life there is always a change that has to come with time and this change would mean he would accept that he would be okay not only with his injury but with his life and himself as a whole.

Both short stories bring readers to the same conclusion of self-acceptance and identity. Through bringing other people into the protagonist’s lives to teach them a lesson, Alexie gives readers to the heart and soul of each character’s journey. He combats his dark and dim in “Search Engine” to “What Ever Happened to Frank Snake Church’s” wit and satire but brings both stories to hard leading end of being okay with their situations and the events that happened in their lives. Corliss and Frank lead very different lives but through the help of Harlan and Preacher learn that life happens how it happens and that being okay with it is the only way to move on okay with life.

Kernel Essay on Eric Liu and Sherman Alexie

Caroline Franco

Mrs. Buckley

Writ 101

25 August 2016

“Notes of a Native Speaker” by Eric Liu and “Lawyer’s League” by Sherman Alexie discuss the power of identity and the common struggle of assimilation for those who are of color. However, Eric Liu discusses his success and how assimilating means that “ he cannot gain the world without losing his soul” while Sherman Alexie discusses the hardships and thoughts that come with being a person of color in a primarily white political world.  Though they both have different outcomes to their lives and stories, their hardships shaped them and made them think about their own identity and place in the world.

Eric Liu discusses what it means to him to be white even when he technically isn’t really a white person. Eric came from immigrant parents who cared about how he turned out as a person and not as an Asian. To him, his whitness was thrust upon him but yet it was not his own conscious choice. He doesn’t understand his own identity because it is a mix of what he thinks he should be and what he has become. “Now I want desperately to see my face, to see what time has marked and what it has erased.  But I can find no mirror, except the people who surround me.  And they are mainly pale, powerful” shows that Eric Liu doesn’t see that his identity lies in who he is and not where he comes from.

Richard feels his identity is what he can do and how successful he can become as an African American and as a Native American. He doesn’t see his identity in himself but only what he can do to climb the political ladder. He turns down love because he feels as if marrying a white woman would hurt his political agenda as becoming one of the true and excellent African and Native American politicians. He gets angry at the thought of racism and takes the easy way out but he never comprehends the consequences of his actions because to him he will never be Bill Bill. “Okay, true, I broke Big Bill’s nose but he was ugly to begin with”, he will never feel the power and the immunity Big Bill has and that plagues him because being who he is he feels he will never get to the root of his identity and that is success.

Eric Liu and Sherman Alexie both make points on identity and how it is rooted in every individual. Eric Liu makes the point that he gave up his identity as an Asian man and received the power he wanted where Sherman Alexie’s character Richard tried to keep his identity as an African American and Native American but never received the power he wanted because the way other would people view him warp his view on the world. The common theme of identity shows that no matter how one lives their life they will still struggle with who they are.