Main Characters
Themes & Symbols
Plot & Conflict
Literary Analysis
Setting/Location
100

This is the nickname of the novel’s teenage protagonist.

Who is Frenchie?

100

Most people in the novel have lost the ability to do this while asleep.

What is dream? 

100

The group travels constantly through these areas to avoid capture.

What are forests/the wilderness?

100

The novel takes place in this type of fictional future society.

What is a dystopia?

100

Climate change and environmental destruction have made much of this country dangerous and unstable.

What is Canada?

200

This character leads the traveling group and shares “Coming-to Stories.”

Who is Miigwans? 

200

This body substance is harvested from Indigenous people.

What is bone marrow? 

200

These government agents hunt Indigenous people throughout the novel.

Who are the Recruiters?

200

The story is mainly told from this point of view.

What is first person perspective?

200

The story takes place in this type of future society marked by fear and oppression.

What is a dystopian society?

300

Frenchie develops feelings for this person.  

Who is Rose?

300

The novel strongly emphasizes the importance of preserving this through stories and language.

What is Indigenous culture and tradition?

300

Non-Indigenous people seek marrow because they want this ability restored.

What is the ability to dream?

300

The loss of dreams in the novel symbolizes this broader societal problem.

What is loss of humanity/increase of harm to the planet? 

300

Indigenous survivors often hide and travel through this natural environment.

What is the forest /the wilderness? 

400

This elder’s songs become a powerful form of resistance.

Who is Minerva? 

400

Dreams symbolize this quality that keeps people moving forward despite suffering.

What is hope?

400

This storytelling tradition helps preserve memories and teachings within the group.

What are coming-to stories?

400

The relationships within the group highlight the importance of this social value.

What is family? 

400

These facilities are used to imprison Indigenous people and extract marrow.

What are Residential schools? 

500

This member of the group loses an eye before joining the other

Who is Wab?

500

The novel’s dystopian future reflects this historical Canadian system.

What is Residential Schools?

500

Minerva’s singing reveals this weakness in the marrow-harvesting process.

What is that Indigenous language and song can resist or disrupt it?

500

The author uses survival and storytelling to communicate this central message.

What is resistance and resilience of Indigenous people? 

500

The collapse of society begins after people around the world lose this essential human experience.

What is the ability to dream?