Review: Firekeeper's Daughter By Angelline Boulley


Daunis Fontaine has never really felt like she fit in. She lives in between her mother's Canadian heritage and her late father's Ojibwe Tribe. Daunis had to put her life plan on hold to help her mother after they experienced another family misfortune. She desperately wants to go to a college to study medicine but it's too far away. She settles to go to a nearby school with her best friend for a year. What could go wrong? It turns out, a lot and tragedy always comes in threes. When Daunis witnesses a murder, finds out the new guy isn't who he says he is, and that drugs are tearing her community apart, she has no other choice but to join a criminal investigation by going undercover to find out who started down this slope.
This is a complex book that has a suspenseful story with bits of humor tossed in. The author is a member of the Sault Saint Marie Ojibwe Tribe that is featured in this story. She was able to add a lot of depth by using her life experiences as a guide. While this book started like a typical young adult novel, it progressed to have complex relationships and deals with drug usage and death. For that reason, I would recommend this book to older YA readers and those who love general fiction.

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