Litte Missuk lives in the far north of Canada. Her father carves soap stone pieces into animals and Missuk longs to learn how to do this but for now she will have to wait because her father needs to set off hunting for caribou. Missuk fills in her day sewing new mittens with her mother and then trying a little carving project but she is so restless. Outside the air is warm but the land is covered in snow. The sky is vast and lying on her back in the snow she sees a flock of migrating snow geese. Missuk makes up a game of lying in the snow and leaving bird-shaped imprints along the trail taken by her father that morning.
Late in the day and into the evening her father does not return. Missuk goes to bed and while she does sleep her dreams become nightmares as her imagination wonders if her father has had an accident or if the husky dogs are trapped in broken ice. Eventually her father does return. He is cold and very tired but once he recovers he explains how he did become lost in a snow storm but close to home he found something special.
"I would have been lost had I not come upon a trail of goose shapes stamped into the snow. Those birds led me across the tundra and up to a hilltop from where I saw our igloo. This is how I found my way home."
Missuk's Snow Goose was published in 2008 so sadly it is out of print but I was pleased to see it was featured in our NSW School magazine in 2019. I picked up this book because I like the illustrations by Geneviève Côté. Here is an interview with Seven impossible Things.
I previously talked about Ella May and the Wishing Stone by Cary Fagan illustrated by Genevieve Cote.
This week IBBY Canada released a wonderful list of Indigenous Picture Books. We are so lucky here in Australia that we speak English and so we can enjoy books from Canada.
Take a look at the three lists - 2018, 2021 and 2023. If you are in Australia you might like to hunt out books illustrated by Julie Flett, Qin Leng, and Soyeon Kim.
When I worked in Canada in 1994 one of my projects was to collect one picture book from each province. I almost completed this task. Here are some of the books I bought home. I have given a few away over the years so there are a few titles I have forgotten (sadly):
If You're Not from the Prairie by David Bouchard illustrated by Henry Ripplinger
Mary of Mile 18 by Ann Blades
Belle's Journey by Marilyn Reynolds illustrated by Stephen McCallum
Last Leaf First Snowflake to fall by Leo Yerza
Oh, Canada by Ted Harrison
Baseball bats for Christmas by Michael Kusugak illustrated by Vladyana Krykorka
A horse called Farmer by Peter Cumming illustrated by P. John Burden
The Mummers Song by Bud Davidge illustrated by Ian Wallace
A Prairie Alphabet by Jo Bannatyne-Cugnet illustrated by Yvette Moore Montréal
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