Fire Keeper's Daughter Review 5

Book: Fire Keeper’s Daughter Review 5

Author: Angeline Boulley

Publishers: Henry Holt and Company

Reviewed by: Nonqaba waka Msimang



“Autumn is a fickle season. Sometimes lingering, sometimes making only a brief appearance.” Page 267.

Daunis, a hockey player like her late father is the storyteller in the book. Jamie and his uncle Ron, are two outsiders who make a brief appearance in the Sault Ste. Marie Superiors hockey team, where her brother Levi, is the team captain.

Maybe I shouldn’t say brief because I’m still in the belly of the book. I haven’t reached page 488 yet. But I’m saying brief because for all intent and purposes, Jamie and his uncle Ron seem to be captivating like autumn but fleeting, not solid.

Jamie is young and beautiful despite a deep scar on his face. Daunis is sweet on him, after her break-up with TJ Kewadin, a cop on Sugar Island, the local reservation where her Ojibwe grandmother lives.  Like autumn leaves, Jamie has no stationary love colour. Is he in love with Daunis? Hard to tell, neither lime, red nor brown.

His uncle Ron also seems to be beautiful also because he is an intellectual, reads Faulkner and talks ‘science’ to Daunis, a bookworm. She is determined to be a doctor and help her community, like Teddie Firekeeper, her father's sister.

“Autumn is a fickle season.” Daunis had a best friend Lily. Travis, her former boyfriend who used meth, a hard drug, shot Lily dead and killed himself. Two other girls died because of meth.

Daunis seems to gravitate towards the notion that Jamie and Ron could be ‘a fickle season’ because they want a Band-Aid solution to the problem, while she wants a long term one.

By: Nonqaba waka Msimang.

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