What is a Sentinel? A **sentinel** is a guard or lookout-someone or something that stands watch, often to protect or warn of danger. The term is used for both people (such as soldiers stationed at a post) and symbolic figures (like statues or monuments that seem to "watch over" a place). In *The Gilded Sentinel*, the word "sentinel" is carefully chosen for its layered meanings. On one level, it refers to the golden Statue of Liberty that dominates the city's skyline-a figure that stands as a sentry, watching over the people below. Yet, in the world of the novel, this sentinel is not simply a protector or beacon of welcome. Instead, it has become a symbol of exclusion, its gilded exterior highlighting the divide between those who belong and those who are kept out. By titling her novel *The Gilded Sentinel*, Wendy A. Sumter invites readers to question what it means to be watched over, protected, or left outside. The sentinel's watchful gaze becomes a metaphor for both the hope and the surveillance that shape the lives of Mira and her community, underscoring the story's themes of belonging, vigilance, and the struggle for justice.
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