Firekeeper's Daughter
1. B (Chapter 1)
2. A (Chapter 8)
3. C (Chapter 10)
4. C (Chapter 16)
5.B (Chapter 20)
6. D (Chapter 26)
7. D (Chapter 30)
8. C (Chapter 33)
9. A (Chapter 34)
10. A (Chapter 40)
11. C (Chapter 46)
12. C (Chapter 51)
13. A (Chapter 54)
14. D (Chapter 55)
15. C (Chapter 56)
Long Answer
1. Daunis thrives in the meth lab because it is a scientific space of laws, order, and methods. Daunis tends to try and compartmentalize her life as a survival tactic to help her withstand the difficulties of her existence. She tends to see the word as a strict binary of “good” and “bad,” and the lab is a space that offers answers and meaning in similarly black-and-white terms. (Chapters 18-20)
2. After the “intervention sweat” ceremony, Daunis is feeling especially close and positive about her Ojibwe heritage. The last few pages of her uncle’s notebook contained information on Ojibwe’s sacred plant-based medicines, so destroying those pages will help keep the FBI away from the community in their investigation of the crystal meth epidemic.