Against the backdrop of Ojibwa cultural traditions, Omakayas also conveys the universal experiences of childhood-a love of the outdoors, a reluctance to do chores, devotion to a pet-as well as her ability to cope with the seemingly unbearable losses of the winter. In fascinating, nearly step-by-step details, the author describes how they build a summer home out of birchbark, gather with extended family to harvest rice in the autumn, treat an attack of smallpox during the winter and make maple syrup in the spring to stock their own larder and to sell to others. Opening in the summer of 1847, the story follows the family, in a third-person narrative, through four seasons it focuses on young Omakayas, who turns ""eight winters old"" during the course of the novel. Erdrich's (Grandmother's Pigeon) debut novel for children is the first in a projected cycle of books centering on an Ojibwa family on an island in Lake Superior.
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