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100 pages 3 hours read

Drew Hayden Taylor

Motorcycles and Sweetgrass

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2010

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Symbols & Motifs

The Indomitable Indian Chief

Befitting his irreverent, taboo-breaking trickster domain, Nanabush rides a seemingly inappropriately named symbol throughout the narrative: a 1953 Indian Chief motorcycle. Taylor is aware of course that the term “Indian,” once prevalent, is now considered disrespectful to Indigenous people—trade names that held onto this word, like that of the Cleveland baseball team, were controversial when the novel was published in 2010 (Cleveland’s team has since been renamed). This is precisely why Taylor gives Nanabush this form of transportation—the demigod is forcing his people to confront an offensive image. Nanabush’s motorcycle becomes a symbol of the Anishnawbe people: A white man rides an Indian Chief, which bends to the rider’s will. The metaphor is stark and offensive, intended to disgust the people of Otter Lake, confronting them with the reality of their continual subordination to white rule.

Nanabush only allows three people to ride on his motorcycle—a vehicle that pointedly has no back seat, so any passenger sits in front. The rides anoint Maggie, Dakota, and Virgil the leaders of the new generation of Anishnawbe, who will guide the Otter Lake Band going forward. In the final encounter with Virgil, Nanabush transforms from a white man to a virile Indigenous man, symbolically proclaiming that the nation will be led by those to whom it belongs.

Rain and Water

When Nanabush comes to Lillian on her deathbed, she asks for two favors. One centers on her family, but the other is a request for pure pleasure that only Lillian can appreciate: a powerful thunderstorm. Nanabush comes through with a torrential downpour. As the rain falls, he stands at Lillian’s grave and explains that rain symbolizes life—for the Anishnawbe, all water is a symbol of life. Though Lillian is dead by the time Nanabush brings this rainstorm, his efforts are not in vain: In a dream meeting, Jesus shares with Nanabush Lillian’s thanks.

The story begins and ends with Nanabush at Otter Lake. In the novel’s beginning, a sunfish observes that Nanabush swims as if he were born underwater—a reference to his uncanny swimming prowess, and also to the amniotic fluid in which every life gestates. In the last scene, Nanabush rides his motorcycle atop the water, implying that he has conquered the source of life.

Shakespearian References

As an act of defiance in the residential schools, Sammy memorized the plays and poetry of William Shakespeare. With a near encyclopedic knowledge of the bard’s works, the adult Sammy translates Shakespeare’s words into Anishnawbe in iambic pentameter—the play’s famous original meter. For example, rather than calling Nanabush either by his true name or his pseudonym, John, Sammy refers to him as Caliban, the brooding, bestial half-monster from The Tempest.

The novel uses these Shakespearean references to comment on the story, turning Sammy almost into the chorus of an ancient Greek tragedy. Quotations elevate seemingly cartoonish events to the height of life-changing drama. For instance, when Wayne shows up at Sammy’s house the first time to confront Nanabush, Sammy quotes Richard the Third’s famous “Now is the winter of our discontent”—which the less erudite Wayne renders as “something about it being wintertime and some people were discontented” (189). The mistranslation is funny—readers know what Sammy is actually saying, so Wayne’s blundering words deflate the gravitas of the original, but the inclusion of the reference equates the characters’ travails to the great historical events about which Shakespeare wrote.

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By Drew Hayden Taylor