Kumak's Fish: A Tale of the Far North

Michael Bania
3.95
125 ratings 37 reviews
On a beautiful Arctic morning, Kumak looks out the window of his house at the sun rising over the frozen river. "Ahhh, spring," says Kumak to his family. "The days are long, the nights are short, and the ice is still hard. Good day for fish." Eager to give Uncle Aglu's amazing hooking stick a try, Kumak packs up his family and heads out to go ice fishing. "Good day for fish!" they all agree. Hapless Kumac is the only one in his family without fish until the tug at the other end of his line incites a mighty battle. A clever ending reveals that the whale-sized fish that Kumak imagined was actually a line of small fish in tug o' war position. Kumak reigns, and there's plenty for everybody. Authentic details throughout the playful art and text, as well as endnotes on Inupiat fishing, provide young readers with a fascinating window into another culture in this follow up to KUMAK'S HOUSE a 2003 Children's Book Council Notable Trade Book in Social Studies.  
Genres: Picture BooksChildrensCulturalAnimalsIndigenousGeographyNative AmericanFoodFamilyFolk Tales
32 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
30 (24%)
4 star
61 (49%)
3 star
32 (26%)
2 star
2 (2%)
1 star
0 (0%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Michael Bania

Lists with this book

Mama, Do You Love Me?
Sleep Well, Siba and Saba
Dragon Dancer
Multicultural Children's Books
207 books62 voters
The Rough-Face Girl
The First Strawberries
The Girl Who Loved Wild Horses
Native American Picture Books
348 books64 voters
Kumak's Fish: A Tale of the Far North
Penguins!
Are You My Dad?
Children's Arctic Unit
16 books3 voters
One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish
The Rainbow Fish
Swimmy
Picture Books About Fish
125 books31 voters