Daughters of the Deer

Danielle Daniel
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Daughters of the Deer

Danielle Daniel
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"A deeply felt and personal story from an author who we can only hope has more tales to tell." —Quill and Quire

"This stunning adult debut from Daniel, who has already won awards for her children's books, has threads of what makes great kid lit: simple but powerful language, harnessing complicated ideas into strikingly distilled images. . . . A beautiful book, this is urgent reading for anyone seeking to understand more about the myriad ways European colonization in the 1600s still reverberates today, to devastating effect." —The Globe and Mail

"Danielle Daniel renders the stories of her ancestors vividly, poetically and with deep love and respect. Daughters of the Deer gives long overdue voices to the Indigenous women who came before. A subtle, moving demonstration of how colonization attempted to strip Indigenous women of their power and place, and a testament to the enduring strength and wisdom that no colonial power could extinguish.” —Jessica McDiarmid, author of Highway of Tears: A True Story of Racism, Indifference and the Pursuit of Justice for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls

Overall rating: 4.5416665 / 5 from 24 reviews.

AI Generated Review Summary

Daughters Of The Deer is highly recommended for its captivating and engaging qualities, though some reviewers found the story stilted and heavy.

Summary topics

  • Engaging Qualities: 32%
  • Story Quality: 46%

Review topics: [story, book, written, deer, fiction, read, woman, novel, ending, writing, healer].

Review highlights

  • "Daughters of the Deer is a compelling and emotional story by Indigenous author Danielle Daniel."TheBakingBookworm
  • "The well researched story is beautifully written."MaryAnn T.
  • "I highly recommend this to my friends who love the books I love."TamaraC

Reviews

Marie's musings and mis/fortune

"Tender, tumultuous and rivetting historical fiction that delves into the life of Marie, an Indigenous woman whose personal, spiritual and community fate is intertwined in an ambiguous relationship with her white francophone settler husband."

Akua (5/5)

Fantastic

"An incredibly emotional historical novel. Even though it is fictional lot provides an eye opening insight into the true history of modern north america."

Steph (5/5)

Riveting read

"Well written contrast of indigenous life to the onslaught of settlers. Heartbreaking, compelling and worth reading."

Catherine K. (5/5)

Daughters of the Deer are kind

"Daughters of the Deer was a little stilted and heavy at the beginning however the story has changed to compelling and powerful with the building of history and passion. It’s a complex and very human novel"

ValW (4/5)

Beautiful story

"Beautiful story , it actually makes me cry … one of my favourites ,"

Maya (5/5)

Amazing Historical Fiction

"This was an amazing historical fiction in a genre that I have not much knowledge in. I highly recommend this to my friends who love the books I love. The author tells the story of the French colonization of Canada’s indigenous people in the Trois-Rivières region of Quebec during the 1600s. I don’t want to share more and spoil it. It is a gripping story."

TamaraC (4/5)

Heart wrenching and thought provoking

"In 1657 Marie, a gifted healer in her tribe, is asked by her chief to marry a white man. It is hoped this unity will help to protect her people. Reluctantly, Marie agrees, giving up her people, culture and way of life. Years later, Marie’s oldest child Jeanne, aged 17, struggles with her identity. She is not Algonquin nor white, and loves her best friend Josephine. Her father expects her to marry soon as the law dictates. Though she would be considered blessed by her mother’s people, the world of the Europeans and their church consider her sinful and to be looked down upon. This book is told from multiple points of view and beautifully outlines the struggles of the indigenous people as the French take over in the Trois Rivières region in the 1600s. At times heart-wrenching, it brings to the forefront all the skills and values held by indigenous peoples that were disregarded, disdained and suppressed by the early settlers from Europe. It also shows the strength of indigenous women and how they have been undervalued and mistreated by the Europeans from the beginning. The final lines of the story are particularly poignant. This book provides a background and food for thought linked to the modern day reality of indigenous peoples."

Nancy (5/5)

Was hoping for more.

"I was expecting a more riveting telling of the story. Instead it seemed choppy and awkward. Perhaps the nature of a first time novelist, and that's fine. The story itself is heartbreaking and open to much profundity and beauty, but it's a bit lost in the writing. That's just my opinion."

MMH. (3/5)

A gut-wrenchingly emotional read

"This is a heart-breaking, but beautiful story of all those women of this earth lost to history. The forgotten generations who lost their voice, their people, their land, their language and all their traditions in an attempt at survival, not realizing all that would be lost. Yet after being mistreated, abused, and generally referred to as savages both by the church and forced or strongly suggested white husbands, these women stand strong and fierce. There is so much of the Algonkin people and their beliefs about relationships, the land, prophecy and balance that are admirable and I wish we held on to to this day. Jeanne's story was tear-inducing and truly horrifying, but honestly believable. It was easy to wonder how the people of this land assimilated and married into their oppressors, but this story made me realize they weren't always this way. Once, harmony was the goal before the white realized they have all the power, wielding faith like a sword. Lyrical and gut wrenching. A story that should be read by all. One of my top books of the year thus far! There have since been some qualms on the background of the author and who should be telling this story. In my opinion, I only see a work of literature outside the creator and if that work speaks to me and raises important issues that should be discussed in Canada today it feels irrelevant who is writing the text, only that the story gets told."

Karishma (5/5)

Absolutely BREATH TAKING!

"This book was absolutely captivating and engaging. You feel a warm connection with the protagonist, while also feeling a sense of sympathy due to the context of their experiences in the 1600’s. This book will keep you on your toes, making it hard to put the book down for a bite to eat or any small errand. 10/10 recommend."

Nicole A. (5/5)

Q&A

  • Date de publication : Mar 08, 2022
  • Langue : anglais
  • Nombre de pages : 344
  • Éditeur : Random House of Canada
  • ISBN : 9780735282087
  • Dimensions : 5.3" W x 1.0" L x 8.0" H
DANIELLE DANIEL is a writer, an award-winning children's book author and an illustrator. Like many Francophones with origins in Quebec, she shares an ancestral link to the people who inspired Daughters of the Deer, a first novel that springs from the story of what happened to the daughter of an Algonquin woman and a soldier/settler from France. Her picture books include Sometimes I Feel Like a Fox (winner of the Marilyn Baillie Picture Book Award and a Best 100 title at the New York Public Library) and You Hold Me Up, shortlisted for the 2018 Marilyn Baillie Award, among other honours. She holds an MFA in creative writing from the University of British Columbia and lives with her family on Manitoulin Island in Ontario.

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