The moose of Ewenki

Gerelchimeg Blackcrane

Book - 2019

"When a Mongolian elder named Gree Shek hunts a female moose by mistake, her young calf is left behind. Saddened by her loss, Gree Shek names the calf Xiao Han ("Little Moose") and the moose and man form an authentic attachment. Xiao Han accompanies Gree Shek as the hunter-gatherer herds reindeer, sets up camp, forages for food in the forest, and visits his peoples' village, where many fun adventures happen. But as the little moose grows bigger, Gree Shek knows he must return his companion to the forest."--Amazon.

Saved in:
Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
Vancouver : Greystone Books [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Gerelchimeg Blackcrane (author)
Other Authors
Jiu er (illustrator), Helen Mixter (translator)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 25 x 26 cm
ISBN
9781771645386
Contents unavailable.
Review by Horn Book Review

The motif of an orphaned wild creature taken and raised by humans is a classic trope, here embodied in a realistic story about a baby moose adopted by the hunter who had inadvertently killed the calfs mother. The setting is, matter-of-factly rather than exotically, contemporary Inner Mongolia, and the hunter, a kind old man who names the moose Xiao Han, Little Moose. Xiao Hans growing size (and hunger!) provides plenty of gentle slapstick humor as he becomes increasingly too much for the hunter and his reindeer herd; the hunters encroaching mortality offers an additional emotional layer. Watercolor and charcoal picturessome sepia-toned, some delicately colorfulare plentiful and detailed, with a good variety of picture sizes, from small homey vignettes, several to a page, to double-page spreads showing the magnificence of the (sometimes comical) beast and the breadth of the forest landscape. Roger Sutton January/February 2020 p.66(c) Copyright 2020. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A surprising bond between an elder hunter and a moose sheds light on the lives of an Inner Mongolian people.In the "vast forests" of mountainous northern China, the Indigenous Reindeer Ewenki people hunt, raise reindeer, and live in nomadic camps. When an old hunter named Gree Shek accidentally makes an orphan of a baby moose, guilt prompts the tan-skinned elder to bring the motherless calf back to his tent for the night. It's not long before Xiao Han ("Little Moose") is adopted into the camp, where he quickly grows to the size of a reindeer, joins the herd, and wreaks playful havoc on his adoptive home. Young readers will delight in the lumbering mammal's antics; for instance, the ever growing Xiao Han insists on spending each night in Gree Shek's tentuntil the clumsy moose knocks it down entirely. Despite the loving bond, the aging hunter realizes that Xiao Han will never be quite suited for life among humans, and the lighthearted tale takes an emotional turn when the steadily declining hunter sends Xiao Han back into the wild. Blackcrane's tale culminates in a rather grim scene: upon checking on Gree Shek's campsite, fellow hunters discover his corpse (illustrated reverently by Jiu Er). Though the plot meanders, the tale is valuable for its thoughtful portrayal of the Reindeer Ewenki's traditional ways. The illustrations' delicate lines and shading meticulously model the characters, and there's a solemnity to them even at their most slapstick.Plodding, endearing, and humorousnot unlike a baby moose. (Picture book. 5-10) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.