Fiction Short Stories (single Author)
Arctic Dreams and Nightmares
- Publisher
- Inhabit Media
- Initial publish date
- May 2025
- Category
- Short Stories (single author), Native American & Aboriginal, Visionary & Metaphysical, NON-CLASSIFIABLE
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781772275643
- Publish Date
- May 2025
- List Price
- $21.95
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Description
Utilizing intricately blended visual and written imagery, Arctic Dreams and Nightmares takes the reader on an Arctic journey interpreted through the mythological and contemporary world of an Inuit artist and author. Containing twenty short stories with accompanying pen ink drawings, it is the first publication to exclusively feature the writing and artwork of Alootook Ipellie. At the time of its original publication in 1993, Arctic Dreams and Nightmares was one of the few books to be written by an Inuk in Canada, and became a landmark in the emerging discipline of Inuit literature.
About the author
Alootook Ipellie was born in 1951 in a camp near Iqaluit, Nunavut, in what was then called the Northwest Territories. He spent his childhood and teenage years experiencing the transition from the traditional nomadic Inuit way of life to government-sponsored Inuit village settlements. In 1973, after a short stint as an announcer/producer for CBC radio in Iqaluit, he moved to Ottawa to study and pursue a career in art. He became a noted artist and a central figure in the Inuit literature movement. Ipellie was the editor of the magazines Inuit Today, published by the Inuit Tapirisat of Canada, Inuit, published by the Inuit Circumpolar Conference, and Kivioq: Inuit Fiction Magazine. His artwork and writing were first highlighted in the 1978 Inuit writing anthology Paper Stays Put: A Collection of Inuit Writing, and he was the co-ordinator of the Baffin Writer’s Project. His artwork, essays, stories, and poetry have been featured in numerous publications, and his art has been featured in exhibits in Canada, Greenland, and the United States.
Excerpt: Arctic Dreams and Nightmares (illustrated by Alootook Ipellie)
The supersonic speed with which my soul had travelled out of my body denied me the opportunity to fully reflect on the true cause of the death of myself and my father. However, like a dream that one finally remembers later in the day, I found out it wasn't by choice that we had left the planet Earth—but by the violent agony of incredible physical pain.
My father and I had been stalking a ringed seal close to a clutter of ice ridges hugging a small island. We had suddenly heard crunching sounds on the hardened snow behind us. But before we could turn around to see what was making the sounds, a powerful polar bear paw had knocked us down. The great white nanuq, the king of Arctic wildlife, had come to stake his claim to the very same ringed seal we were after. With a few powerful swipes of its claws and life-ending bites from its hungry jaws, the great white ghost had cut through our flesh and burst open the bubble of our lifeblood!
My father and I spent our last few moments in the physical world engulfed in the violence of the tyrannical beast. Memorable were the gratified eyes of the king, in contrast to our hysterical shrieks and terrified, bulging eyeballs!