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The Abduction (Aerial Fiction)

AUTHOR: Mette Newth, et al
ISBN: 0374400091

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         Editorial Review

The Abduction (Aerial Fiction)
- Book Review,
by Mette Newth, et al

From Publishers Weekly
In a thought-provoking note, Newth points out that this "story of a clash of cultures . . . is equally a meeting of reason and unreason. . . . Unreason always wants to use power to enforce injustice." This comment, placed sagely as an afterword, can have no better illustration than the moving narrative that precedes it. There are two intertwining stories here, both set in the 17th century. The first is of Osuqo, an Inuit girl who is abducted--with Poq, the boy she is to marry--by foreigners; they are taken from Greenland to Vagen in Norway, where they are debased, treated as animals, then as creatures of Satan, by power-hungry merchant Master Mowinkel and evil Pastor Absalon. The second narrative tells of Christine, whose father fails to return from the voyage during which Usuqo and Poq were captured. She and her mother are forced into servitude in the Mowinkel household, where Christine is made to guard the foreigners. With nothing (except her life) to lose, Christine finds freedom in her decision to help Henrik, Mowinkel's son, in his plan to help the two Inuit escape. Newth has utilized ships' logs and the centuries-old oral tradition of the Inuit in creating a chilling tale of xenophobia and its cruel cost to humanity. Yet this ably translated, thoughtful work is also inspiring: the stain of slavery blots the history of many nations, and Newth provides a fresh perspective from which to consider the "clash of cultures." Ages 12-up. Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal
Grade 8 Up. An Eskimo girl and her betrothed, kidnapped from their 16th-century Greenland home, are tortured and brutalized in the name of religion and science. Alternating narratives between the captives and the Norwegian adolescent who guards them poignantly parallel two worlds. Riveting, thought provoking, and demanding. Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review
"A magnificent achievement, one of the really outstanding young adult novels of this decade-or any, for that matter." --Starred, The Horn Book

"Unforgettable." --Pointer, Kirkus Reviews


Review
"A magnificent achievement, one of the really outstanding young adult novels of this decade-or any, for that matter." --Starred, The Horn Book

"Unforgettable." --Pointer, Kirkus Reviews


Review
"A magnificent achievement, one of the really outstanding young adult novels of this decade-or any, for that matter." --Starred, The Horn Book

"Unforgettable." --Pointer, Kirkus Reviews


Book Description
Based on the actual kidnapping of Inuit Eskimos by European traders in the seventeenth century, this story describes the violence inflicted in the name of civilization, while also evoking the beauty of Eskimo life.


Language Notes
Text: English (translation)
Original Language: Norwegian


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         Book Review

The Abduction (Aerial Fiction)
- Book Reviews,
by Mette Newth, et al

Abduction

ANNOTATION

Based on the actual kidnapping of Inuit Eskimos by European traders in the 17th century, this story describes the violence inflicted in the name of civilization, while also evoking the beauty of traditional Eskimo life. "A magnificent achievement, one of the really outstanding young adult novels of this decade--or any, for that matter."--The Horn Book, starred review. An ALA Best Book for Young Adults; School Library Journal Best Book of the Year. Young Adult.

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Based on the actual kidnapping of Inuit Eskimos by European traders in the seventeenth century, this story decribes the violence inflicted in the name of civilization, while also evoking the beauty of traditional Eskimo life.

FROM THE CRITICS

School Library Journal

Gr 8 UpAn Eskimo girl and her betrothed, kidnapped from their 16th-century Greenland home, are tortured and brutalized in the name of religion and science. Alternating narratives between the captives and the Norwegian adolescent who guards them poignantly parallel two worlds. Riveting, thought provoking, and demanding. (Dec. 1989)


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