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THE MOST AMAZING BIRD by Michael Arvaarluk Kusugak Kirkus Star

THE MOST AMAZING BIRD

by Michael Arvaarluk Kusugak ; illustrated by Andrew Qappik

Pub Date: Nov. 10th, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-77321-418-4
Publisher: Annick Press

An Inuk girl learns lessons in beauty and friendship from an unexpected source.

One day, while crunching along the hard snow with her grandmother, Aggataa spies a raven. But instead of reacting with awe, she says “it’s ugly” and thinks it “looks like it slept in its coat.” Despite Aggataa’s wish for the raven to fly away, it stays all winter, “hop[ping] along behind her” whenever she walks to grandmother’s hut. Aggataa begins to warm to it. When spring returns the raven leaves, and although other birds arrive for the summer, the raven does not. Before long Aggataa observes “long Vs of geese flying south,” and with “no more birds” around, the coming winter promises to be lonely. Only the “Crah” of a particular raven can hope to lift her spirits. Kusugak’s quiet narrative is deeply layered. While the primary narrative revolves around Aggataa’s interaction with the raven and other birds, readers will notice equally poignant threads of story in the changing of seasons, life in the Arctic, and within the multigenerational relationship between Aggataa and her grandmother. Additionally, inclusion of both Inuktitut words for the various birds Aggataa encounters and the onomatopoeic sounds they make creates a wonderful read-aloud. Qappik’s realistic, soft-toned illustrations are rich in their own right. Images of Aggataa and her grandmother feel like snapshots from a family photo album while the detailed depictions of the birds could exist in any ornithological field guide. Both author and illustrator are Inuit.

Stunningly contemporary and amazingly timeless.

(Picture book. 4-7)