Showing posts with label polar bears. Show all posts
Showing posts with label polar bears. Show all posts

April 28, 2023

The Woman and Her Bear Cub

Adapted and retold by Jaypeetee Arnakak
Illustrated by Dayna B. Griffiths
Inhabit Media
978-1-772274660
36 pp.
Ages 3-6
April 2023
 
Many children take it upon themselves to adopt animals they believe have been abandoned. They do it with the best of intentions, though sometimes without regard for the bigger picture. The Woman and Her Bear Cub is a traditional Inuit story of such a fostering but with the wisdom that comes with living in conjunction with the natural environment and not overriding it.
From The Woman and Her Bear Cub by Jaypeetee Arnakak, illus. by Dayna B. Griffiths
A child and her mother are out on the ice hunting when they discover a polar bear cub stranded behind some broken ice. The mother wisely looks for tracks and evidence that the mother bear is nearby but can find none, so they help the cub from its location and take it home.
From The Woman and Her Bear Cub by Jaypeetee Arnakak, illus. by Dayna B. Griffiths
The child calls the cub her baby brother and their bond is as strong as siblings. They spend time together, playing and such, with the bear becoming an integral part of their family, even bringing back seals and fish that he has caught for them.
From The Woman and Her Bear Cub by Jaypeetee Arnakak, illus. by Dayna B. Griffiths
But when the cub is no longer a baby bear, and he becomes so big that the others in the village are concerned, the mother prepares her child for the time he would have to leave them. Still, it isn't until her brother bear returns from hunting one day with his own mother that the mother and child are able to say goodbye.
From The Woman and Her Bear Cub by Jaypeetee Arnakak, illus. by Dayna B. Griffiths
Jaypeetee Arnakak is a multi-talented Inuit linguist, translator, educator, and writer who grew up in Clyde River on Baffin Island. He has edited a collection of traditional stories from oral recordings of Inuit Elders and adapted several into picture books. The Woman and Her Bear Cub is one such traditional story and one that tells of compassion for living things and letting go when the time is right. There is no willful removal of a wild animal to provide companionship or entertainment. Neither is there a selfishness to take and keep what does not belong to them. The mother and her child give sanctuary to a lost bear cub only until he is reunited with his mother. It's not about their needs but about his needs. 

That quietness of purpose and landscape is portrayed in the illustrations of The Woman and Her Bear Cub by artist and designer Dayna B. Griffiths of Toronto. By creating art that appears stark, with a restrained palette of blue, white, and grey-brown, Dayna B. Griffiths makes the Arctic landscape of blue sky and white snow dotted with an occasional qarmaq (dwelling) very powerful. As such, the interjection of a white bear and grey-brown-clad people, with the occasional dog of both grey and white, in that landscape makes them both an important and insignificant focus.

As with most traditional stories, even those that may take on fantastical proportions, there is a germ of truth, and I suspect this one is based in reality. Adopting a lost animal and caring for it until care is no longer necessary is a story for all times. Here, a polar bear and an Arctic landscape may make this story unique, but its premise is grounded in the authenticity of compassion for those in need and dictated only by the one most affected. It is a lesson in selflessness and benevolence and a true reflection of the graciousness of Inuit values.

July 04, 2017

Animals Illustrated


Walrus
Written by Herve Paniaq
Illustrated by Ben Shannon
Inhabit Media
978-1-77227-142-3
24 pp.
Ages 5-8
June 2017







Muskox
Written by Allen Niptanatiak
Illustrated by Kagan McLeod
Inhabit Media
978-1-77227-122-5
24 pp.
Ages 5-8
December 2016


Narwhal
Written by Solomon Awa
Illustrated by Hwei Lim
Inhabit Media
978-1-77227-080-8
24 pp.
Ages 5-8
September 2016



Polar Bear
Written by William Flaherty
Illustrated by Danny Christopher
Inhabit Media
978-1-77227-079-2
24 pp.
Ages 5-8
September 2016



Last year, Nunavut publisher Inhabit Media created a new non-fiction series about arctic animals.  The books of this series, currently a total of four, generally follow a similar format, with chapters on range, skeleton, diet, and babies included in all, but also with possible chapters on predators, defense, traditional uses and fun facts.  Similar in organization but unique in delivery, the books inform, engage and illustrate the nature of these magnificent animals.

Walrus, the most recent volume, was written by elder Herve Paniaq who goes beyond the typical information texts about animals that describe the morphology of the creatures with some life cycle and behaviour.  Readers will also learn about the nature of the walruses' tusks, as anchor, ice pick and defense against their only natural predators, polar bears and orcas, and the function of the walruses’ whiskers and flippers. But it’s the uncommon info, like which bulls can be a threat to boats and how walrus meat is prepared by the Inuit, that makes Herve Paniaq’s Walrus distinct.  Moreover, Ben Shannon’s illustrations bring an elegance to the walrus that might not always be evident.  The cover alone is luxuriant in its depictions of walruses, with one walrus seeming to look out directly at the reader.

The earlier books in the series are all written and illustrated by different authors and artists.  The first book Polar Bear, written by William Flaherty with art by Danny Christopher, includes discussion about the polar bear as hunter and swimmer and its role in Inuit mythology.  Narwhal, written by Solomon Awa and illustrated by Hwei Lim, was also released last June, and includes comment about the narwhal’s deep diving and behaviour beneath the ice, as well as about its impressive tooth, often referred to as a tusk, that can grow up to almost 3 metres in length.  Inuit hunter and trapper Allen Niptanatiak’s volume on Muskox, illustrated by Toronto artist Kagan McLeod, includes extensive information about the muskoxen's strategies for defense and for withstanding the cold.  As in Walrus, the traditional uses of this arctic animal by the Inuit are discussed, providing a community connection that teachers will appreciate.

Animals Illustrated is a significant series for young animal lovers who are interested in reading for themselves about the animals of the Arctic, exotic for many, but without the onerous texts of animal encyclopedias that tell too little about too much.  Walrus, Muskox, Narwhal and Polar Bear strike the right balance of information and graphics, including only relevant and revealing science, intriguing our youngest readers to pursue further information about each as they choose.

February 25, 2015

International Day of the Polar Bear: February 27


Whether you're interested in learning more about these magnificent mammals and their natural history or read about fictionalized accounts of their relationships with humans, this book list of youngCanLit titles should provide enough variety of fiction and non-fiction, picture books and novels, and even film to appease any reader interested in honouring the polar bear on February 27.


Picture Books

The Bear That Had No Bump of Locality
by Galt Denham
Illustrated by Bettie Kerkham
Vantage Press
30 pp.
Ages 6-9
1983

Ben and Nuki Discover Polar Bears
by Michelle Valberg
MV Photo Productions
38 pp.
Ages 7-9
2012

Bubbly Troubly Polar Bear
by Lisa Dalrymple
Illustrated by Elizabeth Pratt
Tuckamore Books
32 pp.
Ages 4-7
2013

Mikissuk's Secret
by Isabelle Lafonta
Illustrated by Barroux
Scholastic
40 pp.
Ages 6-8
2008

My Arctic 1, 2, 3
by Michael Arvaarluk Kusugak
Illustrated by Vladyana Krykorka
Annick Press
24 pp.
Ages 3-7
1996
The Orphan and the Polar Bear (Unikkaakuluit series)
by Sakiasi Qaunaq
Illustrated by Eva Widermann 
Inhabit Media
32 pp.
Ages 6-10
2011

Out on the Ice in the Middle of the Bay
by Peter Cumming
Illustrated by Alice Priestley
Annick Press
32 pp.
Ages 4-8
2004

Penguin and the Cupcake
by Ashley Spires
Simply Read
48 pp.
Ages 3-7
2014

The Polar Bear's Gift
by Jeanne Bushey
Illustrated by Vladyana Langer Krykorka
Red Deer Press
32 pp.
Ages 5-7
2000

The polar bear in the rock: two windows on the world = Nanuk ujagammi: unikkausikkut kaujimajunullu kaujisautinga
by Derek H. C. Wilton
Illus. by Cynthia Colosimo
Labrador Institute of Memorial Univ.
24 pp. 
2010

A Polar Bear Night of Stars and Light
by Jennifer LaBella
Windermere House Publishing
32 pp.
Ages 5-8
2008

Snow Bear
by Liliana Stafford
Illustrated by Lambert Davis
Groundwood/Douglas & McIntyre
32 pp.
Ages 6-9
2001

When Wishes Come True
by Per-Henrik Gürth 
Lobster Press
32 pp.
Ages 5-7
2009








Fiction
Frost
by Nicole Luiken
Great Plains Teen Fiction
158 pp.
Ages 14+
2007 

Frozen
by Lori Jamison
Illustrated by Charlie Hnatiuk
H.I.P. Books
75 pp.
Ages 11-17
2012

Ghosts of the Pacific
by Philip Roy
Ronsdale Press
251 pp.
Ages 11-14
2011

The Middle of Everywhere
by Monique Polak
Orca Book Publishers
208 pp.
Ages 12+
2009

Northern Exposures
by Eric Walters
HarperCollins
Ages 10+  
256 pp
2012

Payuk and the Polar Bears
by Vita Rordam
Borealis Press
44 pp.
Ages 8+
1981

The Pole
by Eric Walters
Penguin
256 pp.
Ages 10-14
2008

Sharla
by Budge Wilson
Fitzhenry & Whiteside
168 pp.
Ages 12-15
1997


Trapped in Ice
by Eric Walters
Viking/Penguin
205 pp.
Ages 9-13
1997

Trouble at the Top of the World (Screech Owls, #22)
by Roy MacGregor
McClelland & Stewart
127 pp.
Ages 9-13
2008

www.walkwithapolarbear.com
by Mercedes Montgomery 
Your Nickel’s Worth
125 pp.
Ages 9-13
2008










Non-Fiction
Arctic Adventures: Tales from the Lives of Inuit Artists
by Raquel Rivera
Illustrated by Jirina Marton
Groundwood/House of Anansi Press
48 pp.
Ages 8-12
2007

Arctic Icons: How the Town of Churchill Learned to Love Its Polar Bears
by Ed Struzik
Fitzhenry & Whiteside
212 pp.
Ages 15+
2014

Ava and the Little Folk
by Neil Christopher & Alan Neal
Illustrated by Jonathan Wright
Inhabit Media 
41 pp.
Ages 5-11
2012



Baby Polar Bear 
(Nature Babies series)
by Aubrey Lang 
Photography by Wayne Lynch
Fitzhenry & Whiteside 
35 pp.
Ages 5-7
2008


Bärle’s Story: One bear's amazing recovery from life as a circus act
by Else Poulsen
Greystone Books
227 pp.
Ages 14+
2014

Bears: Polar Bears, Black Bears and Grizzly Bears
by Deborah Hodge
Illustrated by Pat Stephens
Kids Can Press
32 pp.
Ages 5-11
1996

Canada’s Arctic Animals 
(Canada Close Up series)
by Chelsea Donaldson 
Scholastic 
44 pp.
Ages 6-8
2005

The Curse of Akkad: Climate Upheavals That Rocked Human History
by Peter Christie
Annick Press
144 pp.
Ages 11-14
2008

The Life Cycle of a Polar Bear 
by Rebecca Sjonger and Bobbie Kalman
Photographs by Marc Crabtree
Crabtree
32 pp.
Ages 8-11
2006

Nanook and Naoya: The Polar Bear Cubs
by Angele Delaunois
Translated by Mary Shelton
Photographs by Fred Bruemmer
Orca Book Publishers
48 pp.
Ages 8-11
1995

Polar Animals 
(Who Lives Here? series)
by Deborah Hodge 
Illustrated by Pat Stephens
Kids Can Press
24 pp.
Ages 4-7
2008

Polar Worlds: Life at the Ends of the Earth
by Robert Bateman with Nancy Kovacs
Scholastic Canada
48 pp.
Ages 8-12
2008

Vanishing Habitats 
by Robert Bateman 
Scholastic 
48 pp.
Ages 7-12
2009



Film
Arctic Circle = Cercle Arctique
Directed by Takashi Shibasaki, Atsushi Nishida and Wally Longui
Produced by Wally Longui, Cindy Witten and Toshiro Matsumoto
National Film Board of Canada
80 min.
Ages 12+
2009

Land of the Ice Bear
Directed by Andrew Manske and Albert Karvonen 
Produced by Albert Karvonen and Jerry Krepakevich 
National Film Board of Canada
46 min., 10 sec.
Order Number: C9199 224
Ages 15+
1999