Have you read “Doe Season” in a classroom setting? Share your interpretation of the ending in the discussion below (but remember—no pirated links, please).
Given the story’s power—its cold woods, its crying doe, its fleeing girl—it is worth the effort. David Michael Kaplan captured something rare: the precise second a child realizes that growing up does not mean finding yourself, but rather losing the person you were. And that is a lesson no summary can replace. If you enjoyed the themes of “Doe Season,” explore Alice Munro’s “Boys and Girls” (another farm-based coming-of-age) or Rick Bass’s “The Hermit’s Story” (modern nature writing). Doe Season By David Michael Kaplan Full Text
Throughout the story, Andy navigates two worlds. Her mother represents domestic safety—staying home, baking, and rejecting the hunt as “silly and cruel.” Her father represents the wild—the cold, the guns, the masculine code of silence. Andy, whose nickname blurs gender lines, struggles to prove she belongs in the male domain. Have you read “Doe Season” in a classroom setting