The Whale People / COPY 2

by Roderick Langmere Haig-Brown

Paperback, 1962

Status

Available

Call number

FIC HAI

Call number

FIC HAI

Description

In The Whale People, young Atlin must one day succeed his father Nit-gass, a great whaling chief of the Hotsath people. The boy trains for his role with the mixture of yearning and apprehension experienced by every youth racing toward adulthood - except that in Atlin's case, his whole community is depending on his success. With lean, sure-footed prose, Haig-Brown captures the tangled emotions of adolescence, and in the process conveys a vivid portrait of pre-Columbian life on the West Coast. Never preachy or condescending, The Whale People is richly furnished with the material and spiritual mainstays of its characters: canoes, harpoons, animals and "tumanos," the personal magic a great whaler and leader must possess. "Timeless" is a term too freely bandied about, but seldom has a story so deftly married the moment with the millennia. Written 40 years ago - it was named Book of the Year for Children by the Canadian Library Association in 1964 - it could be set 400 years ago, yet there is not one quaint or dated sentence in it.… (more)

Publication

Collins (1962), 184 pages

Language

User reviews

LibraryThing member CanadaGood
Exiting tale from the pre-European era. Told in a realistic and exciting fashion. One of my favourite books.
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