51 pages • 1 hour read
Louise ErdrichA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
On the opening page of the novel, Faye is literally at a crossroads while leaving the cemetery and thinks, “There is no right way. No true path. The more familiar the road, the easier I am lost” (3). Why does Faye feel lost even in familiar territory? By the end of the novel, would Faye still agree that “there is no right way”? Why or why not? Is she still lost, or has she found her way?
What is the basis for Faye and Kurt’s unusual relationship (love? power? need?), and what does it reveal about each of their characters? Why do they only meet at night and remain aloof towards one another during the day? Why does Faye think of herself as circling Kurt, “dragging my chain” (21)? How does their relationship change at the end of the novel, and why?
Contemplating the relationship between mothers and daughters, Faye proposes that mothers are “held to a standard so exacting that it has no principles” and are thereby always “to blame” (20). Discuss how the mothers in this novel—Elsie, Anaquot, and Ira—are both blameworthy and defensible. If blame is an important element of mother-daughter relationships, how is forgiveness, as well?
By Louise Erdrich
Fleur
Louise Erdrich
Future Home of the Living God
Louise Erdrich
LaRose
Louise Erdrich
Love Medicine
Louise Erdrich
Shadow Tag
Louise Erdrich
The Antelope Wife
Louise Erdrich
The Beet Queen
Louise Erdrich
The Bingo Palace
Louise Erdrich
The Birchbark House
Louise Erdrich
The Game of Silence
Louise Erdrich
The Leap
Louise Erdrich
The Master Butchers Singing Club
Louise Erdrich
The Night Watchman
Louise Erdrich
The Plague Of Doves
Louise Erdrich
The Red Convertible
Louise Erdrich
The Round House
Louise Erdrich
The Sentence
Louise Erdrich
The Shawl
Louise Erdrich
Tracks
Louise Erdrich