Wesakaychak and the Wolves

Description

19 pages
$2.50
ISBN 0-88954-379-8
DDC 497'.3

Author

Publisher

Year

1993

Contributor

Illustrations by the students of St. Andrew's School
Translated by Philip Goodwin
Reviewed by David M. Kelly

David M. Kelly teaches religious studies at Brock University in St.
Catharines.

Review

This trilogy is confusing because of the lack of any introduction.
Written in both English and Innu, the books appear to be a collection of
Nahui animal tales for very young readers. The text and format are
simple, as are the black-and-white illustrations by artists Jack Goodwin
and the students of St. Andrew’s School. The illustrations reflect a
Native art style, or at least an imitation of it. The tales themselves
are mildly amusing. They explain how the animals chose the 12 months of
the year; how the wolves must sniff each other to find their own furs;
and how the beaver got his flat tail (Wesakaychak dropped a rock on it).


Children may well get a laugh or two out of them, but these books are
not a first-choice purchase.

Citation

Wynne, Tina., “Wesakaychak and the Wolves,” Canadian Book Review Annual Online, accessed September 19, 2024, https://cbra.library.utoronto.ca/items/show/20712.