In Search Of April Raintree Analysis

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The book In Search of April Raintree is written by the author Beatrice Culleton Mosionier. Two sisters April and Cheryl are Aboriginal, they discover the troubles in life by experiencing domestic and sexual assault throughout the story. Many people question if the sexual assault scene Mosionier included should be removed from the book or not due to appropriateness for young readers. The graphic rape the main character April experiences should not be removed because it gives an emotional and personal connection to the readers, gives insight on the issue Aboriginal women face, and it is important in setting out the future events leading to the end.

Sexual abuse is a topic many do not feel comfortable addressing in anyway but Mosionier chose to write and include the detailed abuse for that reason. The scene emotionally connects the readers to the entire book by giving strong descriptive details about an abusive crime
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This scene is relevant to the book because it shows in detail how the character deals with the abuse. It also shows how being sexual abused mentally destroyed her and her relationships with the other characters diminished as she struggled to overcome the situation. Without this scene the book would not have a dramatic climax that connects the future events with the end of the book. The sexual assault scene is where the two sisters April and Cheryls relationship begins to fall apart, removing this part would cause a gap in the book and would lose the effectiveness of the story.

Mosionier successfully included a scene with graphic details about the main character April being raped. The domestic and sexual abuse shown through In The Search of April Raintree is a hard and tough read but yet gives clear insight on issues women face throughout Canada. The abuse is graphic and emotional but successfully connects the future relationships with the end of the