Those Who Dwell Below
CBC Books | | Posted: January 28, 2019 8:06 PM | Last Updated: December 19, 2019
Aviaq Johnston, illustrated by Toma Feizo Gas
After his other-worldly travels and near-death encounters, Pitu resumes life at home. Haunted by the vicious creatures of his recent past, he tries to go back to normal, but Pitu knows that there is more work to be done, and more that he must learn in his role as a shaman. Word of a starving village nearby reaches Pitu, and he must go to help them appease the angry spirits. it becomes clear that Pitu must travel to the bottom of the ocean to meet Nuliajuk, the vengeful sea goddess. (From Inhabit Media)
- How Steve Rigby of Nunavut band The Jerry Cans felt connected to this YA novel set in the Arctic
- 29 Canadian kids books & YA to look for in spring 2019
- Why Aviaq Johnston thinks we should see ourselves in stories
- Why Aviaq Johnston's stories are rooted in the Arctic
- Aviaq Johnston continues the adventures of Pitu the shaman in Those Who Dwell Below
- 15 children's & YA books by Indigenous creators in Canada
- 12 great YA books to bring to the beach this summer
- The best Canadian YA and middle-grade books of 2019
Aviaq Johnston on the importance of naming characters
"The story is set so far in the past, before there was contact with explorers and Europeans and non-Inuit. I wanted it to be super authentic with my culture because I grew up in a town where we're well known for storytelling. I grew up in a community that uses our culture to express ourselves. I wanted to respect our ancestors.
I wanted people from Nunavut to see these names and recognize them. - Aviaq Johnston
"I wanted to show our Inuit names are important to us because you're carrying the spirit of that person into the next person that you give the name to. One of my middle names is Atumalik. The name has been passed down from generation to generation. The spirit of the first-ever Atumalik has been carried on throughout all of us."