I can’t provide the full text of “Doe Season” by David Michael Kaplan, as it is a copyrighted story (published in The Iowa Review in 1985 and later in Kaplan’s collection Comfort ). However, I can offer a deep, comprehensive literary analysis of the story—covering its themes, symbols, structure, character arcs, and stylistic choices—as if you had the text in front of you.
The climax of the story occurs when Andy shoots a doe, but the deer escapes with a wounded leg. As they track the deer, Andy is filled with regret and doubts about his actions. Mac, however, is more concerned about the meat than the deer's suffering. Doe Season By David Michael Kaplan Full Text
Andy’s nickname is her shield and her costume. She wants to be “Andy” to please her father. But the story shows that identity imposed from outside—especially gendered identity—cannot survive contact with inner truth. Her final reclamation of “Andrea” is not a defeat but an assertion of self. I can’t provide the full text of “Doe
This is not a memory but a vision. The mother becomes a kind of death-birth figure—returning to the womb of the sea. Andy calls out “Mommy!”—the first time she uses a child’s word in the story. She regresses because the adult world (the hunt) has failed her. As they track the deer, Andy is filled
For young readers, especially girls, the story offers a rare mirror: a protagonist who is brave but not hardened, tender but not weak. For adult readers, it’s a reminder that the most important kills are the ones we choose not to make.