The language has returned. Now the people must decide how to carry it.
After the events of The Listening Tree, Kaasteek has become more than a woman who listens. She has become a living center of return - a witness to language moving back into the world, into children, gatherings, paths, fires, and ordinary hands.
But what begins between people does not stay simple.
In The Burning Woods, the fifth book of the Kaasteek Saga and the second book of the adult trilogy, the community enters a season of quiet fracture. No one declares a war. No one begins by choosing a side. Instead, a pot leans. A path lowers. A hand reaches too late. A bowl waits in the wrong place. A fire still burns, but no longer gathers everyone the same way.
As language spreads beyond Kaasteek, people begin to interpret what it means, who should guide it, who should protect it, and who should be trusted when uncertainty grows. Care becomes arrangement. Arrangement becomes expectation. Expectation becomes belief.
And belief, once it has a place to stand, is not easily moved.
Rooted in Tlingit land, language, and worldview, The Burning Woods is a mythic literary novel about community, return, responsibility, and the danger of trying to control what can only live between people. It is a story of fire and path, silence and correction, belonging and division - where every small gesture teaches the next body what is allowed.
The woods do not burn all at once.
They burn slowly first.