100 pages 3 hours read

Drew Hayden Taylor

Motorcycles and Sweetgrass

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2010

A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.

Discussion/Analysis Prompt

Though a comic novel, Motorcycles and Sweetgrass deals with some serious issues: the difficulties of tribal governance, the loss of culture and language, forced assimilation, and the devastating impact of the boarding school era, for instance. How does Taylor manage to convey these serious ideas through comedy? What choices does he make in characterization, plot detail, and language that allow him to keep the narrative tone light without trivializing the issues that surface in the novel?

Teaching Suggestion: Students may tend to focus exclusively on what makes the novel amusing—they may, for instance, quickly point to eccentric characters like Wayne and Nanabush and to comic incidents like Virgil and Wayne’s repeatedly frustrated foot-chase in Chapter 17. But the intent of this question is to get students to think critically about how the novel manages to be respectful of serious issues despite its comic intent.

If students are overly focused on the humor of the novel, you might offer them a hint: Taylor is engaged in a careful balancing act, providing enough detail to create empathy for characters and the serious issues they face without dwelling overmuch on the darkness of these issues. Taylor’s characters are engaging, yet their interior worlds are not as fully realized as some in other novels, for instance, and though Taylor shows the impact of the boarding school experience on two characters, he omits or elides some of the more graphic and horrifying aspects of this era.