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Walk Two Moons

Major Themes

Another significant theme of the novel is the inner journey that every adolescent embarks upon as he or she gains independence from parents and gains self-identity. As Sal takes a physical journey across the United States with her grandparents, she also takes an inner journey that causes her to change. Before she leaves on her road trip, Sal still believes her mother will return one day.

After her mother leaves, Sal doesn't know how to feel. She had always been a mirror of her mother — "if [her mother] was happy, [she] was happy. If [her mother] was sad, [Sal] was sad." She sees a calf and feels happy. She realizes for the first time in her life that she has feelings of her own without her mother's presence. Sal believes her mother might have left to set Sal free. She feels independence from her mother. By telling Phoebe's story, Sal learns that she had nothing to do with her mother leaving because her mother chose to leave. Sal is able to let go of the guilt she has been feeling ever since her mother left. Sal also understands, for the first time, the magnitude of her father's grief. She is able to forgive her father for not taking her with him when he went to Idaho to bury her mother. As a consequence of taking an inner journey, Creech suggests that individuals gain insight that leads to maturity and independence.

Creech also includes the theme of hope for readers. Sal's Indian heritage is important to her because she needs stories of reincarnation to give her hope for the future. Creech also includes Pandora's box as a source of hope. Sal looks into Pandora's box and sees the horrible things that are a part of the world. She also sees that "most people seem a lot like us: sometimes afraid and sometimes brave, sometimes cruel and sometimes kind." Sal chooses to hold on to the hope that is in the bottom of Pandora's box and turn "to the other box, the one with the smooth beautiful folds inside." Creech believes that in order to be brave enough to face the evils in the world, everyone needs hope.

Other themes that Creech includes in Walk Two Moons are love for others, such as the love Gram and Gramps have for each other, the love that was evident between Sal's parents, the love that is present in the Finney household, and the love that develops between Sal and Ben. Separation from others and growing apart, both as a natural part of growing up and unexpected or forced separations, and the importance of not judging another man "until you've walked two moons in his moccasins" are also significant themes.


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