The Mar Grow Thieves By Cherie Dimaline

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Cherie Dimaline, The Dreamer. Dystopian novels are highly appreciated in the literary world, mainly because of how intriguing they are. These novels pique the mind of avid readers because of the amount of imagery and complexity put into the description of the setting in these books. Through one of her most notable works, a bestselling novel called The Marrow Thieves, Cherie Dimaline is a remarkable example of this point. The Marrow Thieves is a dystopian novel written by Cherie Dimaline, it uses setting to amplify the effect of the many themes and characters as well as using a hostile environment to heighten the conflict of the novel. To begin, Cherie Dimaline uses setting to make the story’s conflict more intriguing and clear. With a great …show more content…

The schools they speak of in the book symbolize a very hostile environment in the novel. With this being said, we can state that, to enhance the characters development and overall design, Dimaline sets the story 26 years in the future from now, in 2050. What she did here was make the story plot over three generations after the peak of residential schools in Canada, this also means the peak of indigenous segregation and racism in the great north. By doing this, the author optimizes the portrayal of the characters in this book, because it was set so far away that every character in the story has witnessed for the first time real indigenous oppression. In the beginning of the book Frenchie’s brother was taken by the recruiters and Frenchie was imagining life if we were to get taken, he states; “A few had escaped from the schools and the stories they told were anything but heartwarming” (Cherie 4). This statement demonstrates that Frenchie has only heard stories about things that happen to his people and has not yet had first hand experience of the worst of the

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