Tag Archives: Inuit

Another Chilling Read from the Arctic

 book cover: The Bone Seeker


Destination: Canada, The Arctic Circle

Book:  The Bone Seeker, An Edie Kiglatuk Mystery, by M. J. McGrath (NEW 2014)

“The boundaries of murder were unlimited.  Like some far distant universe, every individual act of killing was dark and vast and unknowable.” From The Bone Seeker by M. J. McGrath

The Arctic
Land and ice and water near Kuujuaq. Photo by Murray Dewing at Flickr.

I love finding books that are not only fun to read, but also shed light on a place and a culture that I know next to nothing about.  So how many books have you read that take place in the Arctic and have an Inuit heroine?

One difference between southerners (anyone south of the Arctic Circle) and the Inuits (Eskimos) is that we southerners think of ice as frozen water.  However, in the Arctic, they think of water as melted ice. Edie Kiglatuk, an Inuit, shares this bit of cultural difference along with many others along the way to solving the mystery of a missing teen girl.

If you need to cool off from  hot summer weather, let M. J. McGrath transport you to an island. No soft breezes and palm trees here, though.  Just too much daylight all summer long. Edie Kiglatuk, the main character is uncomfortably warm when the temperature raises above freezing. That makes McGrath mysteries the perfect books for ‘chilling.’

Artic wolf tracks
Photo by Johannes Zielcke, from Flickr

Edie has taken a summer school teaching position in the town of Kuujuaq, a small town in Nunaviq in far north Quebec Province. In summer, the sun never sets on this Arctic region, and the constant light plays havoc with people’s sleep cycles.

Edie, while not officially a detective, brings a wealth of experience and appropriate skills to the job when her friend Sergeant Derk Paliser, the only law in these parts, recruits her to help. They are searching for the killer of a teenage girl, Martha, whose body is found in a lake that is suspected by the Inuits of harboring evil spirits. Edie is an expert tracker, and sees things that elude people more used to walking on pavement than on ice.

As in the previous Edie Kiglatuk mystery that  I reviewed, The Boy in the Snow, set in Alaska,  The Bone Seeker reveals a much wider evil conspiracy than a simple murder.  In Boy in the Snow, Edie uncovered corrupt politicians and a human trafficking ring.  Here, the suspense builds and you will not fully realize the meaning of the book’s title until you arrive near the end.

You know you’re in for a wild ride when the Canadian Defense Department shuts down the investigation and takes away the body and all evidence.  Derek resents the non cooperation of the Army and his anger makes him less than a diplomat. Edie keeps some of her actions secret even from Derek. The native people on the island don’t trust any outsiders (qalunaat), even Derek, who is only half Inuit. Meanwhile, a female attorney who has been representing the tribe in a suit against the government aimed at cleaning up contaminants for the “evil” lake, endangers herself by refusing to back down when old paperwork hints at deep secrets.

As you can see, there is plenty of conflict to go around, and plenty of strong characters who refuse to “behave” when the government wants them to back away.

 NOTES: I am an Amazon affiliate, which means if you click on the book cover and shop at Amazon, A Traveler’s Library will earn a few cents to help pay the Internet rent. Thanks.

Click on photos to learn more about the photographers.

 

Canada: Inuits from the Arctic Go to Alaska and Solve Crimes

CANADA MONDAY

This book is not written BY a Canadian, and does not take place IN Canada, but is about Inuits from the Arctic Circle in far northern Canada. This book may not make you want to travel to its main locale, Alaska, but it just may make you yearn to visit the Inuit settlement on Ellesmere Island in the Canadian Arctic, in search of Edie.

Alaska Book: The Boy in the Snow Destination: Alaska

Book: The Boy in the Snow, An Edie Kiglatuk Mystery (NEW in paperback and e-book, October, 2013) by M. J. McGrath

As I read this book, the last part* of a poem called Fire and Ice by Robert Frost kept running through my head:

…I think I know enough of hate

To say that for destruction ice

Is also great

And would suffice.

Nome Alaska Seacoast
Nome Alaska, Coast of the Bering Sea, Photo by Dan Perez

The Boy in the Snow: An Edie Kiglatuk Mystery  is so firmly dependent on its setting and the culture of its main characters, that you might say it is frozen in place. (Ouch! Terrible pun.)  The setting is Alaska, where Edie Kiglatuk has gone to help her ex-husband who is running the Iditarod (the unique dog-sled marathon). Edie, her husband, and a policeman/game warden sidekick come from Ellesmere Island in the Arctic Circle. They are Inuit. Edie is only half Inuit (her friends joke that she wears her wristwatch on the other half) but culturally, the ways of the “Outside” mystify her as much as she mystifies the outsiders. She tries to explain herself to an Alaskan policeman early in the book.

“Listen detective, I was born in Autisaq on Ellesmere Island. Seventy people live in Autisaq…I watch TV, I teach at the school, but your world, this world, is hot and crowded and noisy and you eat stuff that doesn’t even resemble food…

Writer M.J. McGrath does for the Inuit (Eskimos to us outsiders) what Tony Hillerman did for Navajos. I was hoping her website would give me more insight into how a non-fiction writer (by the name of Melanie McGrath) from England becomes expert enough on the Inuit to write a whole detective series.  I did learn that she wrote a book about the transport of a people from Hudson Bay to Ellesmere Island. She has an old post in her moribund blog about the high rate of homicide in the Arctic Circle.  Finally I got a little insight with this CBS interview, from soon after her first book, White Heat, was published.

Inuit Man in Kayak
Inuit Man in Kayak, 1929

 

McGrath gives us a peek into the Inuit lives while letting us see ourselves reflected in their eyes. The reflection is not always a pretty sight.
Led into the woods by what she believes is a spirit bear, Edie discovers the frozen body of a baby.  That incident sets up her very unofficial investigation that leads to political corruption,religious intolerance, human trafficking and numerous dead bodies.
The actions of the dangerous people in this story are magnified by the dangers and unique challenges of the frozen landscape.  While Edie sees the snow and ice as a friend, they also become a deadly enemy. Driven to continue her hunt–Inuit women, are born to hunt–she tracks her prey tirelessly, waiting for her chance.
Along the way she makes sharp observations like this of her neighbors in the apartment building ” (they) were living like cliff birds, wedged into their tiny little fortresses, puffing up their feathers and pecking away all comers, wary of any motives that were not their own.
Edie befriends a waitress who learns to serve her a double hamburger without the bun and minus veggies, a dish of reindeer stew, and a side order of bacon. She kills a coyote to freeze chops for her dog. Although she’s driven snowmobiles before, she teaches herself to drive a four-wheel vehicle for the first time by renting a truck and taking off from Anchorage for Homer, driving through snow and rutted roads.
People who have visited Alaska may be amused or bemused by her observations of familiar places.  Anchorage, she says, is not different from “the other tiny frozen hamlets she was familiar with, human settlements hopelessly outclassed by surroundings that were forever threatening to swallow them up.”
While I moved across the country to get away from freezing winters, Edie only feels really comfortable in weather that calls for four layers of clothing. Riding a snowmobile out of Nome, she says:

The sun appeared briefly, and it was bitter cold, the kind of hard crisp freeze you could do business with.  Heading east on the sea ice with the land spread low and rocky to her left, the great expanse of Norton Sound to the right, she felt more at home than she had since she’d arrived in Alaska.

Inuit Nation on a map
Inuit Nation Map, Photo by Douglas Sprott

Edie Kiglatuk is certainly the most original amateur detective I’ve every come across, and I highly recommend it for its peek at a culture we generally don’t learn about.  The Boy in the Snow is the 2nd in the series.  McGrath’s first, White Heat, was highly praised.

Disclosures: The publisher has provided copies of the books for review and for the contest.  Photos here are from Flickr, and are acknowledged. Click on the photo for more information.  Links to Amazon are for your convenience, should you want to buy the book. However, I am obligated to tell you that A Traveler’s Library will make a few cents off of any purchases you make through those links. That’s how we keep running this site, so thank you!
*Fire and Ice by Robert Frost starts:
Some say the world will end in fire,
Some say in ice.
From what I’ve tasted of desire
I hold with those who favor fire.
But if it had to perish twice…