The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1959, Side 49

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1959, Side 49
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 47 are the Bible and the poems of Robert Burns, both of which are read at the breakfast table. The writer now takes us with Ian and his father to the boats that were to take them to the new country. They reach York Factory, and then make a long inland journey by river and lake to the place where Fort Douglas was built on the Red River. Ian’s lone- liness is relieved by the coming of a new family in which there was a boy of his own age, named Don. They be- come very close friends, and have inter- esting experiences, such as finding an Indian pony, which the Governor per- mitted them to keep at the Fort. They gave him the name Donian (for Don and Ian). An encounter with the rivals of the Hudson’s Bay Company, the Nor' Westers; the trials of the settlers and their dauntless courage; the massacre at Sevn Oarks, after which Ian was mistakenly obsessed with the fear that he had broken his pledge by breaking the fifth Commandment; the departure from Fort Douglas and the return to it; the pow-wow with the Indians, and their treaty with Lord Selkirk; these events and situations tie in with the historical background of the story. The story is one of absorbing inter- est from beginning to end, and being thoroughly wholesome, would be a valuable addition to any school library. Mrs. Guttormsson has had a num- ber of short stories and articles publ- ished, and during World War 11, a play written by her, entitled “Moss- grown Rocks’’ was produced on the CBC network. This was a story with its setting in Iceland during the Am- erican occupation. —Salome Halldorson COLD ADVENTURE by VIOLET INGALDSON Copp Clark Publishing Co. Ltd. Garry Moisted has just finished high school and intends to attend univer- sity to study to be a fish biologist and ichthyologist. His Uncle Ben, however, feels “that a young man should be able to give a hand to almost any kind of work”. His folks came from Iceland and had fished on Lake Winnipeg with a fair amount of success. But the fish catch was decreasing. He told Garry. “I think one of us, a descendent of the first commercial fishermen on the lake, should study the life cycle of fresh water fish and I want that person to be you. I want you to go winter fish- ing because ia man to be an authority on fish should know and sympathize with the men who earn their living by fishing. If you can’t survive a few months of winter fishing you’re not the makings of an ichthyologist and studying to be one would be wasted time.” Cold adventure is the story of Garry’s experiences during this winter of fish- ing on Lake Winnipeg. It is the story of Garry and Bergiu caught on an ice floe; the friendship of Nick, the Boss’ son and Tim which could have had serious repercussions; the search for Nick and Tim lost on the lake and of near death when the bombardier almost slipped into a crevice on the lake; the time Garry and Tim caused the men to burst into con- vulsions of laughter when they had put floats on both sides of the nets. The characters are Icelandic and one feels the author has skilfully depicted the workings of the Icelandic mind. Garry learns that though the

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