Skraelings
55 pages
English

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55 pages
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Description

Finalist for the 2014 Governor General’s Literary Award!


In this adventurous novel—set in the ancient Arctic, but told by an inquisitive and entertaining contemporary narrator—a wandering Inuit hunter named Kannujaq happens upon a camp in grave peril. The inhabitants of the camp are Tuniit, a race of ancient Inuit ancestors known for their shyness and strength. The tranquility of this Tuniit camp has been shaken by a group of murderous, pale, bearded strangers who have arrived on a huge boat shaped like a loon. Unbeknownst to Kannujaq, he has stumbled upon a battle between the Tuniit and a group of Viking warriors, but as the camp prepares to defend itself against the approaching newcomers, Kannujaq discovers that the Vikings may have motivations other than murder and warfare at the heart of their quest. This lush historical fiction is steeped in Inuit traditional knowledge and concepts of ancient Inuit magic.


Winner for the Burt Award for First Nations, Inuit and Métis Literature


Best New Book for CSM’s 25 Best New Books for Middle-Graders


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Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 01 avril 2014
Nombre de lectures 4
EAN13 9781772270396
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0300€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Published by Inhabit Media Inc.
www.inhabitmedia.com
Inhabit Media Inc. (Iqaluit), P.O. Box 11125, Iqaluit, Nunavut, X0A 1H0 (Toronto), 146A Orchard View Blvd., Toronto, Ontario, M4R 1C3
Design and layout copyright © 2014 Inhabit Media Inc.
Text copyright © 2014 by Rachel and Sean Qitsualik-Tinsley
Illustrations by Andrew Trabbold copyright © 2014 Inhabit Media Inc.
Editors: Neil Christopher and Louise Flaherty
Art director: Danny Christopher
All rights reserved. The use of any part of this publication reproduced, transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, or stored in a retrievable system, without written consent of the publisher, is an infringement of copyright law.
We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts for our publishing program.
We acknowledge the support of the Government of Canada through the Department of Canadian Heritage Canada Book Fund program.
Printed in Canada
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
Qitsualik-Tinsley, Rachel, 1953-, author
Skraelings : clashes in the old Arctic / Rachel and Sean
Qitsualik-Tinsley.
ISBN 978-1-927095-54-6 (pbk.)
1. Inuit--Juvenile fiction. I. Qitsualik-Tinsley, Sean, 1969-, author II. Title.
PS8633.I88S57 2013 jC813’.6 C2013-908382-0

1
Unknown Places
Here’s the story of a young man who, at the time of his tale, had no clue where his family might be living. If you had been there to ask, the best answer he might have given is:
"Somewhere behind me."
Not that he was lost. No, it was simply that happiness means different things to different people and it was his great joy to travel across strange lands. He went without human companionship. He had no idea where he was going. There were no enemies in his life. No friends (except maybe his sled dogs). Yet not one of these facts meant that he was lost.
Unknown places, even uncertainty about where he would next sleep or eat, rarely frightened the young hunter. You, however, whoever you are reading this, would have scared him. Not because you have two heads, or you’re coloured green, or you come from another planet. No, it’s exactly because you come from the same planet as him that you might have scared this person.
You see, you are from another time. On our earth, the earth that you know, the world is choked with people. We can see them on TV. Sit with them on an airplane. Brush shoulders with them in busy halls or on the street. Unless you’re very lucky, you don’t know what quiet is. Real silence. Not the quiet you get when folks stop yammering. We’re talking about the silence of standing alone in the wide Arctic on the great Land where only the wind or an odd raven whispers from time to time, and the loudest sound is your own breath.
That kind of quiet has a heaviness to it. A life of its own, you might say. And that is the sort of quiet our hunter was used to.
This is not to say that you couldn’t have been friends with the young man, since he was very much a human being, like yourself. It is simply that, even if, by some magic, you could have spoken a common language with him, your ideas of the world would have been very different. To be honest, the easy part would have been explaining televisions and airplanes to him. Even busy halls and streets. But how would you have gotten across the simple idea of a country? Or a border? In our world, the earth is so crowded. There are so many rules. It’s normal that everyone knows their citizenship. You can barely move without a passport. And you can’t step on a clot of land that hasn’t been measured and assessed for its value. It would be strange to hear of land that isn’t owned. Every inch of dirt, in our time, belongs to somebody. In our world, people even talk about who should own the moon.
But the young hunter’s land was not just dirt, you see. It was not land with a little "l": something we can measure and pretend to own. His was the Land. And he called it Nuna. And like everything under the Sky, it had a life of its own.
Land as property would have made the young man and his relatives laugh. After all, the Nuna was a mystery. No one knew its entire shape or extent. Humanity did not set limits on the Land. The Land set limits on humanity. It was the Land, including the sea that bordered it, that made demands on how all life existed.
"No one can even control the Land," Kannujaq might have told you, "so how can one own it?"
That was the young hunter’s name, by the way: Kannujaq. He was named for a mysterious stuff that came from the Land. In his language, kannujaq described a funny, reddish material. It was rare, but known to a few of his people. You probably would have recognized it, called it "copper," and tried to tell Kannujaq that it was a metal but that would have meant very little to him. You see, a tiny bit of copper was the only metal he had ever seen. You might have then tried to explain to this young hunter that he only thought copper was special because he lived in the Arctic, and so long ago.
But we almost forgot: you can’t tell Kannujaq anything. It would be over a thousand years before we could write about Kannujaq, much less let you read about him. And no matter how hard Kannujaq dreamed, he could never have imagined people like us.
In Kannujaq’s time and place, he was usually too busy to dream, anyway. The Land never let his mind wander for long, holding him in an eternal moment. To this day, it has that power, the ability to force the mind into a single point of attention. Visit it sometime. Find a place away from "progress." Maybe you’ll see why the Land was such a beloved mystery to Kannujaq and his folk. While you’re on the Nuna, stand on a windswept ridge. Raise your arms, open to the grand Sky. And imagine how Kannujaq stood.


Kannujaq’s eyes were closed, his nostrils pulling in the pure air, and the silence was such that he seemed to detect every stirring in his world. A raven muttered, and he opened his eyes to spot one on a nearby, lichen-encrusted boulder. Another wheeled in the sky above him. He smiled, knowing that the birds resented his presence, and his eyes panned over the rocky ridges that played out before him. The low slopes mixed shades of brown, a bit of purple, some bits of dark green from heather and willows that grew no higher than his knee. In the troughs between the slopes, the low valleys, there was barely enough snow for his dogsled. By now, he was soaked with sweat. Long tongues dangled from the mouths of his exhausted dogs.
Kannujaq’s smile eventually faded. Though the Land had rarely frightened him, he experienced a shiver of dread.
Here and there on the most distant ridges, Kannujaq spotted inuksuit stacks of flat stones, carefully piled so as to resemble people when their silhouettes were viewed against the sky. And Kannujaq knew who had made them. His grandfather had said so. The inuksuit were the works of Tuniit, a shy and bizarre folk who had occupied the Land long before the arrival of Kannujaq’s family. It was said that the strength of the Tuniit was great. Hauling a stone the size of Kannujaq himself was as nothing to one of them. That was just as well, since the Tuniit relied on stones to hunt. Since the inuksuit resembled people standing on the hills, caribou took paths to avoid them. Every year, when the caribou did so, the Tuniit supposedly took advantage of their route, herding the animals into zones where they could be slaughtered. The Tuniit hunted with bows, as Kannujaq’s own people did. Kannujaq’s grandfather had seen one of the Tuniit hunting sites: all bones on top of bones. Some new. Others quite old. It had seemed clear that the Tuniit had hunted in their weird way for generations.
Kannujaq frowned, recalling his grandfather’s stories, and not even the Land’s glory was able to pull his thoughts away from the Tuniit. He wondered about the Tuniit hunting style. It meant that they stayed in pretty much the same place. Maybe even year round. That was a strange notion to Kannujaq. His people were always travelling, exploring for exploration’s sake, family members splintering off to found their own little groups along new coasts. For generations, travel, a hunger for the unseen, had been the great drive of his folk. Ringed seals. Lovely whales. Stinky walruses. All the creatures of the coasts these made up food and tools to fuel a search whose sole purpose was life itself. Life was a joy, and one grand hunt.
The Tuniit, thought Kannujaq, who could survive their way? He was not cold. But, in thinking about these not-quite-human folk, a chill ran through him. He stood alone in their hunting lands. He had come to regret taking this detour. His winding path among the hills had led him away from the coast, where he was most comfortable, and his dog team was having a rough time among the rocks.
He sighed and started back down to his sled, when a low howl made its way over the wind. In a moment, it was joined by another. Then several more. Eventually, the howls were like those of a small pack of wolves. Even a large pack would have been nothing to fear Kannujaq was armed with a bow and a spear, both crafted according to the high standards of his people. And then there were his dogs to defend him. But Kannujaq nevertheless shuddered at the sounds ahead of him: he knew all animal noises, and these cries were not those of true wolves.
Tuniit, he thought, imitating wolves. Maybe driving caribou.
So, even now, the Tuniit were hunting in this place. He decided not to bother them or chance being bothered by them slipping and sliding his way back down the slope, to where his dogs awaited. Luckily, his team was only making low, anxious whining noises at the wolf sounds of the Tuniit. But if Kannujaq did not get his dogs out of here, it would be only a matter of time before one or more would howl in return.
Soon, the sled was again making its slow way back toward the coast, rushing ahea

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