135 pages • 4 hours read
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Firekeeper’s Daughter has four sections, each labeled one of the cardinal directions. The directions are symbolic of where Daunis is in her hero’s journey at that particular section of the book. The story begins in the eastern direction, where all journeys begin, according to the Ojibwe tradition. Part 2 takes place in the south, which is said in the book to be a time when people both wonder and wander. Daunis moves into the southern direction after she makes her decision to help Ron and Jamie as a CI. The majority of the book takes place in the south. Part 3 moves into the west, which is a time involving constant change. This section begins right after Daunis is kidnapped by Dana Firekeeper and dumped in the trailer on Sugar Island. Daunis has completely cracked open the case. Now, everything she had questioned and almost everything she wanted to see and know is going to be revealed to her. The last section takes place in the north, which is a “time for resting and reflecting in the place of dreams, stories and truth” (Part 4 title page). It is here, in the final section, that Daunis dances again, where she tells Teddie’s girls about going away to school, where she wears her regalia into the powwow grounds and tells the story of who she was and who she’s become.
Daunis reveals her spirit name to the reader early on in the book yet never shares it with Jamie. Daunis’s spirit name is symbolic of both that which she struggles with and where many of her gifts are. Daunis has a fraught relationship with both of her families because she feels like she can never be truly herself in either of them. Daunis copes with this by walking very separately in each family and only letting herself be in one family at a time. She knows when to be a Fontaine and when to be a Firekeeper. While Daunis thinks this strategy makes everyone else more at ease with her, she is denying part of herself at all times in her waking life. Daunis will learn that strength and power come from her multiple backgrounds. Daunis, by the end of the book, is no longer striving to be a part of one “clan.” She is the clan entirely by being herself. She is also someone who is caretaking for the “clan” as well.
From the moment that Daunis witnesses Travis and Lily’s death, she is repeatedly visited by dreams of the horrific scene she watched play out before her. The dream changes throughout the novel, however. The dream’s ability to show more and more to Daunis as she goes deeper into the investigation is symbolic of Daunis’s growing ability to not only see things and people clearly but to recognize and trust the truth as it is presented to her.
Addiction
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American Literature
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Appearance Versus Reality
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Community
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Grief
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Indigenous People's Literature
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Psychological Fiction
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Romance
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Sexual Harassment & Violence
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Summer Reading
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The Best of "Best Book" Lists
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