Readers are gripped by the immediate, daily physical challenges of finding food and warmth while trapped on an unpredictable, drifting ice floe.
The book captures the internal shift as Alika moves from being a child to a provider who must make life or death decisions for his younger brother.
The detailed descriptions of Inuit hunting and shelter building provide a satisfying sense of competence and resourcefulness that feels grounded in reality.
Children respond to the intense emotional connection between the brothers as they provide each other with the psychological comfort needed to endure months of isolation.
Reach for this book when your child is facing a situation that requires immense patience, responsibility for a younger sibling, or the need to find inner strength during an isolated struggle. Set in 1863, the story follows two Inuit brothers, fourteen-year-old Alika and his younger brother Sulu, who become trapped on an ice floe drifting through the Greenland Strait. Over the course of six months, they must rely on traditional knowledge, physical endurance, and their deep bond to survive the harsh Arctic winter. This is a story of profound resilience and the transition from childhood into the weight of adult responsibility. It is ideal for middle grade readers who are beginning to navigate their own independence and want to see characters who succeed through grit rather than magic. Parents will appreciate the historical accuracy and the respectful depiction of Indigenous survival skills, making it a powerful tool for building empathy and grit.