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Inukshuk

par Gregory Spatz

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The gripping tale of a young man's obsession with an Arctic explorer's doomed quest to find the Northwest Passage
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Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
Weird. I wanted to like this and I read most of it but I ended up not finishing because it was just kind of strange. I don't know a lot about John Franklin and I'm not sure this was the right venue to start.
  bostonbibliophile | Mar 4, 2014 |
This is the story of John Franklin, a single-parent teacher in northern Alberta. His oldest son is away at univeristy, leaving John to raise fifteen-yeard-old Thomas. Both John and Thomas are still recovering from the departure of Jane, who has left her husband and children to work in the Arctic. Their "expedition" into this new family dynamic seems as doomed as the famous Franklin search for the Northwest Passage. In fact, Thomas is obsessed with that expedition, to the point of trying to contract scurvy in other to better identify with the explorers.

The Franklin expedition provides an interesting backdrop, or frame, for the modern-day story. John and Thomas are well developed characters, and their relationship is well portrayed. I found the writing style a bit challenging, though. Long paragraphs and/or sentences, and jumps in point of view that sometimes left me playing catch up. ( )
  LynnB | Feb 1, 2014 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
Is it just me or are we in the 21st century becoming fascinated by the attempts made to discover the North-West Passage and especially the story of Sir John Franklin? I know I learned a bit about this in school (many years ago) but in the past decade it seems like every year, at least, another book comes out about Franklin or other explorers who tried to find the North-West Passage. This Wikipedia article has a list of books but I know it misses some that I have read:
Darkness at the Stroke of Noon by Dennis Murphy
Race to the Polar Sea: The Heroic Adventures of Elisha Kent Kane by Ken McGoogan

This book views the Franklin Expedition through the eyes of a teenaged boy, Thomas Franklin. Thomas is fascinated by the details of the expedition. He has plans for a movie and he's drawn extensive pictures as a story board. He even is trying to replicate the conditions experienced by the men on the journey to the point of not eating anything with vitamin C so that he can get scurvy. Thomas is a pretty strange boy but he also has normal teenage hormonal urges. So when his younger female neighbour invites him into her house they start to fool around.

Meanwhile, Thomas' father, a school teacher, is struggling with his own emotions. His wife has left him to work in the north and he's not sure if he wants to try to reconcile or if he should act on his attraction to the mother of a student.

The whole book takes place over a short period of time, most of it just in 2 days, but it seems longer because there is so much packed into it. Both Thomas and his father seemed very realistic to me. In fact, I really wanted to shake some sense into both of them. By the end of the book they each have an epiphany about their life and I was glad about that. However, I was left feeling slightly disappointed by the whole book in terms of how it dealt with the Franklin Expedition. I know that there are still questions about where it went and what happened to the people on it and I suppose this book is as good a supposition as any. I just felt that it kind of petered out after exploring the minutest details.

Nevertheless I would recommend this book to anyone who is curious about that chapter in our history or who likes to read about the emotional lives of men and boys. ( )
  gypsysmom | Nov 2, 2012 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
The author's writing style is very off-putting and made the book a hard one to enjoy. Page long rambling paragraphs were common place and boring. The interspersing of movie script about the John Franklin expedition was equally dull, poorly realized, and detracted from the story more than it added.

There were elements of success - inter-family turmoil, coming-of-age strife, self-realization and the like - but they never aligned which was unfortunate. ( )
  TiffanyHickox | Sep 26, 2012 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
I put in for this one due to an interest in the Franklin Expedition, and the book feels like an attempt to juxtapose that event with the angst of a modern Canadian teenager, and really doesn't pull it off. Pretty much a case of "One of these things is not like the other", and it serves neither narrative well in doing so. Try "The Terror" by Dan Simmons for a good Franklin Expedition tale, and there's plenty of other good coming-of-age tales out there. Skip this one. ( )
  corglacier7 | Sep 1, 2012 |
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He was on lunch duty when it happened, jacketless because of the Chinook wind and composing in his head a line or two about the color of the sky reflected in the wet school-yard pavement, the ice-rimmed, quickly vanishing puddles, clouds whipping past upside down ... sun oil water.
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The gripping tale of a young man's obsession with an Arctic explorer's doomed quest to find the Northwest Passage

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