Welcome to the LitCharts study guide on Louise Erdrich's The Plague of Doves. Created by the original team behind SparkNotes, LitCharts are the world's best literature guides.
The Plague of Doves: Introduction
The Plague of Doves: Plot Summary
The Plague of Doves: Detailed Summary & Analysis
The Plague of Doves: Themes
The Plague of Doves: Quotes
The Plague of Doves: Characters
The Plague of Doves: Terms
The Plague of Doves: Symbols
The Plague of Doves: Theme Wheel
Brief Biography of Louise Erdrich
Historical Context of The Plague of Doves
Other Books Related to The Plague of Doves
- Full Title: The Plague of Doves
- When Written: 2003–2008
- Where Written: Minneapolis, Minnesota
- When Published: 2008
- Literary Period: Native American Renaissance
- Genre: Novel, Historical Fiction
- Setting: The fictional town of Pluto, North Dakota and the adjacent Chippewa reservation
- Climax: Evelina learns the true role her grandfather played in the brutal hangings that have haunted her small town since 1911.
- Antagonist: Emil Buckendorf
- Point of View: First Person
Extra Credit for The Plague of Doves
Trying a Trilogy. Erdrich is famous for returning to the same fictional place and fictional characters across several novels, and The Plague of Doves is no exception. Plague of Doves marks the first installment in the “Justice” trilogy (which also includes the 2012 novel The Round House and the 2016 novel LaRose). The Round House focuses mostly on Judge Coutts’s son with Geraldine Milk, while LaRose jumps forward to the early 2000s, seeing how Pluto has evolved in the early years of the George W. Bush administration.
Pieces of Plague. Though The Plague of Doves was not published as a full-length, epic novel until 2008, the first chapter—in which Evelina describes the doves that descended when her grandfather Mooshum was 12—appeared in the New Yorker as a short story in January of 2004. Indeed, all of the novel’s first several chapters were released (sometimes under different titles) as short fiction in a variety of American magazines, including The Atlantic Monthly and North Dakota Quarterly.