Eagle Drums

by Nasuġraq Rainey Hopson
First sentence: “Sweat trickled down his back.”
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Content: There are some intense moments and talk of death. It’s in the Middle Grade (grades 3-5) section of the bookstore, but I’d give it to the older end of the age range. I read this book for the Cybils, and this is a reflection of my opinion and not that of the whole panel.

Pina (that “n” isn’t right, but I don’t know how to make the letter on my keyboard) is the son of Iñupiaq people, who live by themselves and work hard to survive each year. His two older brothers went missing, presumed dead, a couple of years ago, and so his parents are loathe to let him leave. And yet, they need obsidian for their spears and knives. So, they send Pina to the mountains. There he meets Savik – one of the Eagle Gods – who tells him: come with me and learn what we have to teach you, or die. So, Pina makes the only choice he can (the one his brothers didn’t make): he goes with Savik. He lives in the mountains, and learns singing, dancing, storytelling, and how to build a gathering place. All because the Eagles want to be remembered, and want their people to gather together.

This is based on a folk legend of how the Iñupiaq Messenger Feast (which is still held) began. It reads like an extended folk tale: often the prose calls the main character “the boy” and while the tasks he is given aren’t impossible, they are daunting and he has to Overcome them to return home. I liked the book, but I am not sure it’s meant for children. Sometimes that happens when a main character is a child’s age, the publisher thinks it’s for kids. But I can’t imagine a 10- or 12-year-old sitting down to this one and actually enjoying it. It lacks action, it lacks conflict (except for the main conflict of getting Pina back to his parents), it lacks humor. That’s not to say it isn’t worthwhile: it is, very much so. I just am not sure it’s a kids’ book.

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