Hunter's Daughter

Hunter's Daughter
Nowick Gray
Northern Quebec, 1964. Mountie Jack McLain, baffled by a series of murders, knows the latest case will make or break his career. Eighteen-year-old Nilliq, chafing under the sullen power of her father in a remote hunting camp, risks flight with a headstrong shaman bent on a mission of his own. Their paths intersect in this tense mystery charting a journey of personal and cultural transformation.
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About the Author

The novel Hunter's Daughter draws on the author's experience and research in Quebec Inuit villages, where he worked as a teacher in the late 1970s. The students in his classes were among the first generation of their people to grow up in settlement houses. His acquaintance with traditional Inuit life draws on ethnographic and historical accounts, documentary reenactments produced by the National Film Board of Canada, and most important, firsthand journeys on the land with Inuit engaged in traditional activities.
Nowick Gray writes a variety of fiction and creative nonfiction that bends boundaries and confounds categories. He also works as a freelance copy editor and enjoys playing African drums. Having survived American suburbs, the Quebec Arctic and the BC wilderness, Nowick is now based on Canada’s West Coast, frequenting tropical locations in winter months.

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