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THE WALRUS AND THE CARIBOU by Maika Harper

THE WALRUS AND THE CARIBOU

by Maika Harper ; illustrated by Marcus Cutler

Pub Date: April 14th, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-77227-256-7
Publisher: Inhabit Media

In this playful retelling of an Inuit origin story, a feisty elder creates two of the Arctic’s most celebrated animals.

Guk, an Inuit woman with graying braids and light brown skin, has the power to “breath[e] life into the world.” With imagination and exuberance, Guk creates the walrus and the caribou. Young readers may notice that Guk’s creations aren’t quite as they should be: The walrus sports “huge antlers” while the caribou’s snout contains fearsome tusks. Aside from their comical appearances (rendered whimsically in Cutler’s cartoony illustrations), the walrus’ and caribou’s mismatched features also wreak havoc on the human world. The walrus’ antlers accidentally “overturn the kayaks in the water”; meanwhile, “every time it saw a hunter, the caribou would charge him with its tusks.” Guk addresses these issues by gleefully swapping the appendages to better suit the animals. In a final act of reckoning, Guk punishes the caribou for its cantankerous attacks against the hunters, via a swift kick—thereby giving the caribou its distinctively flat forehead and skittishness of humans. Inuit author Harper’s high-spirited version of this Indigenous oral tale will make a delightful addition to both libraries and personal collections. Backmatter includes a short Inuktitut glossary with a link to more Inuktitut language resources.

A lively #ownvoices romp into the power of intention—and the hilarity of trial and error.

(author’s introduction, glossary) (Picture book. 5-12)