June In Elie Wiesel's Day By Louise Erdrich

766 Words2 Pages

June is one of the most important and inspiring characters in the novel. Although she dies in the beginning of the novel, her existence still appears throughout the whole novel. As a child June suffered from emotional damage and it has a major effect on her life. June’s mother dies when she is young and her father is not stable enough to take care of her so Marie Kashpaw decides to take her in and allow her to become a Kashpaw She does not have any similarities with Marie so her uncle Eli raises her. She does not want to trust a woman after the encounter with her parents. Before her mother dies she lets June out into the wilderness and June was found living off of tree sap. As a result of her not having parents she does not be the mother that …show more content…

She is described as a long legged Chippewa woman, age hard in every way except how she moved (Erdrich 1)As she is walking this man at a rigged bar got her attention and invited her in. Erdrich states, he looked familiar, like a lot of people looked familiar to her. She had seen so many come and go.in other words June has dealt with a lot of men in her lifetime. Erdrich states, even if he was no different, she would get through this again (Erdrich 4).The guy seemed liked he had money to June and that is exactly what she needs. While talking to the man he offers to buy her a Blue ribbon, which is a cheap kind of beer. After buying her a beer he peel her eggs to match her turtle …show more content…

The peeling of the pink egg prevents her desire and replaces it with a fading color of the earth, of blood and of sexuality. After she drinks the blue ribbon beer she says the man is different. June looks for change through alcohol and sex but the only transformation they bring is destruction and death.June also describes feeling brittle and fragile on her skin yet pure and naked inside like a shell. June decides to have sex with the man for money but before they have sex he falls asleep and June gets out the car and starts to walk. Erdrich states, the snow fell deeper that Easter than it had in forty years, but June walked over it like water and came home (Erdrich 7) As she walks a snowstorm approaches and she

More about June In Elie Wiesel's Day By Louise Erdrich

Open Document