''Split Tooth'' is a 2018 novel by Canadian musician
Tanya Tagaq. Based in part on her own personal
journals, the book tells the story of a young
Inuk woman growing up in the
Canadian Arctic in the 1970s.
The book has been described as a blend of fiction,
memoir
A memoir (; , ) is any nonfiction narrative writing based on the author's personal memories. The assertions made in the work are thus understood to be factual. While memoir has historically been defined as a subcategory of biography or autob ...
, poetry and
Inuit folklore. Characterized by the publisher as
magic realism, it has also been seen as an example of
Daniel Heath Justice's critical concept of "wonderworks" or literature by
Indigenous North American writers that defies conventional Western notions of literary genres.
The book won the
Indigenous Voices Award for English Prose in 2019. The novel was also longlisted for the 2018
Giller Prize, and was shortlisted for the 2019
Amazon.ca First Novel Award.
Background
Split Tooth was written by Tanya Tagaq based on journal entries, poems, and short stories that she had written over the previous 20 years.
Tagaq was raised in
Cambridge Bay,
Nunavut
Nunavut is the largest and northernmost Provinces and territories of Canada#Territories, territory of Canada. It was separated officially from the Northwest Territories on April 1, 1999, via the ''Nunavut Act'' and the Nunavut Land Claims Agr ...
, and attended high school in
Yellowknife
Yellowknife is the capital, largest community, and the only city in the Northwest Territories, Canada. It is on the northern shore of Great Slave Lake, about south of the Arctic Circle, on the west side of Yellowknife Bay near the outlet of t ...
before finding success in
Toronto
Toronto ( , locally pronounced or ) is the List of the largest municipalities in Canada by population, most populous city in Canada. It is the capital city of the Provinces and territories of Canada, Canadian province of Ontario. With a p ...
performing
Inuit throat singing. At 43 years old in 2018 when ''Split Tooth'', Tagaq's first and only book was published, she had already released four studio albums and was appointed to be a
Member of the Order of Canada.
Summary
Through a series of alternating short prose, poems and illustrations, the Inuk narrator recollects aspects of growing up in the
Nunavut tundra in the 1970s. The unnamed adolescent girl protagonist lives in a small seaside town where rape, addiction,
domestic violence, and bullying are almost everyday dangers. Through her relationship with her younger sister she begins to connect spiritually to the land, eventually learning
soul projection to meet with a variety of mythic and incorporeal forces. While projecting on the sea ice in an attempt to find
Sedna, she instead encounters a deific set of
Northern lights, who impregnate her with twins named Savik and Naja. As infants, Naja acts as a healer strengthening the
life energy of those around her, while Savik instead begins to predate on people's sicknesses and immorality, killing the protagonist's alcoholic uncle and threatening her other loved ones. She attempts to kill Savik on the ice, but he
shapeshifts to resist and the exertion of life energy instead drains and kills Naja. She releases Naja's body to the water, where she revives for the twins to merge into a seal and swim off. The protagonist surrenders to the elements, but instead projects through her own memories to speak with the spirits of her relatives before returning to the land of the living.
Style and themes
The book is divided by unnumbered chapters with poems and illustrations in between pieces of short prose. The prose is written with a poetic quality and moves the narratives along. The poems include one written in
Inuinnaqtun, a dialect of an
Inuit language. The illustrations are all full-page, black-and-white drawings by
Chicano artist
Jaime Hernandez. The book integrates some of the author's real life background and experiences, fiction and
Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit. For example, the story of
Sedna is related as a counterpoint to the 1970s
Panarctic Oils seismic testing.
[ The publisher categorizes the genre as magical realism, as the author noted Gabriel García Márquez as being an influence, though it also fits within the genre of ]Bildungsroman
In literary criticism, a bildungsroman () is a literary genre that focuses on the psychological and moral growth and change of the protagonist from childhood to adulthood (coming of age). The term comes from the German words ('formation' or 'edu ...
. The book has been cited as an example of the genre "wonderwork" as described by literary academic Daniel Heath Justice, being Indigenous literature that defies conventional Western notions of literary genre.
Among the themes is that of interconnectedness: "life and death, tenderness and violence, everyday existence and the spectacular spirituality inherent in nature are one and the same". The setting cycles through alternating the "24-hour day and perpetual night"[ of the high arctic. Like her last album, '' Retribution'', the theme of rape is prevalent throughout the work: "the rape of women, of children, of traditional lands, the shame brought on Indigenous people by these assaults, by the residential school system...lost languages, grinding poverty, generational trauma."][
]
Publication and reception
''Split Tooth'' was published by Penguin Books
Penguin Books Limited is a Germany, German-owned English publishing, publishing house. It was co-founded in 1935 by Allen Lane with his brothers Richard and John, as a line of the publishers the Bodley Head, only becoming a separate company the ...
imprint Viking Press and released on September 25, 2018. An excerpt was published in '' The Walrus'' and it charted for several weeks on ''The Globe and Mail
''The Globe and Mail'' is a Newspapers in Canada, Canadian newspaper printed in five cities in Western Canada, western and central Canada. With a weekly readership of more than 6 million in 2024, it is Canada's most widely read newspaper on week ...
s Canadian fiction bestseller list. It was awarded an Indigenous Voices Award, longlisted for the 2018 Giller Prize, the 2019 Sunburst Award and nominated for the Amazon.ca First Novel Award while the author was shortlisted for the Kobo Emerging Writer Prize and the book designer Jennifer Griffiths was given to the Alcuin Society Award for Excellence in Book Design in Canada. At the same time, an audiobook version voiced by Tagaq was released and nominated for an Audie Award, and a version translated into French by Sophie Voillot was published by Alto, titled ''Croc Fendu'', and longlisted for the Prix des libraires du Québec.
The review in the '' Quill & Quire'' stated "Like a smirking teenager, Split Tooth blithely gives typical literary expectations the finger, daring us to see and experience narrative as chaotic, emotional, and deeply instinctive. And it succeeds."[ The review in the '' Winnipeg Free Press'' concluded that the book's "triumph" is describing a real life that "overflows with the supernatural, the unexplained, the unknown".] In '' La Presse'', the reviewer wrote "Tanya, she likes the right words, the precise, the poetic." Another reviewer stated "This is definitely a work to admire for how the author has told the story and what it has to offer, rather than one to enjoy." ''Quill & Quire'' editor, Sue Carter, writing in the ''Toronto Star
The ''Toronto Star'' is a Canadian English-language broadsheet daily newspaper. It is owned by Toronto Star Newspapers Limited, a subsidiary of Torstar Corporation and part of Torstar's Daily News Brands (Torstar), Daily News Brands division.
...
'', noted that ''Split Tooth'', along with Cherie Dimaline's '' The Marrow Thieves'' also released in 2018, shows that there is now "a broad demand for Indigenous-authored books."[
]
See also
* Soul wandering
References
{{Tanya Tagaq
2018 Canadian novels
Books by writers from peoples indigenous to the Americas
Canadian bildungsromans
Canadian magic realism novels
Inuit literature
Novels about child sexual abuse
Novels about race and ethnicity
Novels about religion
Viking Press books
2018 debut novels