A review by emilypoche
Fireweed: A Novel by Lauren Haddad

4.0

Thank you to Astra Publishing House for providing this ARC for review consideration via NetGalley. All opinions are my own.

Fireweed is the story about a woman living in an isolated area of Canada living an increasingly suffocating life. When a national search for a missing young woman converges with the protagonist’s own neighbor’s disappearance, she becomes increasingly preoccupied with investigating. The story is complicated by the fraught race relationships between the First Nation and Indigenous people and the white Canadians in the town.

The things that I think the author did very successfully is create an atmosphere of claustrophobia and frustration in the main character. There’s a sense of voiceless ness and directionless that’s really highlighted by the brand names, store names, and clutter that are in so many scenes. The author highlights a very lonely middle class existence of a woman who is internalizing her problems.

The author does a wonderful job of showing that Jenny is using her past traumas, poor relationships, yearning connection, as the fuel for her investigation. At a certain point it’s clear that her search for Rachelle is much more about herself and her own identity and self esteem than a true closeness and concern.

What I do think was a little disappointing is that this book very much uses the missing and murdered indigenous women as a scaffold for a story of personal discovery of a white woman. While that may have been the aim for the author to show how white people can co-opt movements for their own reasons, it was disappointing that the storyline ends so abruptly at the end. I just felt like two paragraphs about Jenny feeling wistful in the last chapter wasn’t a fully fleshed ending for this storyline (even if she never ends up being found or getting justice.)