A truly remarkable memoir. One of the best books I've read this year.
With no prospects and no money, Edward Beauclerk Maurice signed on with the Hudson's Bay Company. He was 16 years old. He sailed across the Atlantic from England for the first time, and after a period of training in Montreal, he was sent to his first posting: Pangnirtung on Baffin Island. In those days, these settlements were completely cut off. One ship a year brought supplies, mail, and news of the outside world.
That first year sees him falling through ice and nearly falling off cliffs, but he also falls under the spell of the Inuit, and begins to learn their language. The book really comes alive in the second half, when Maurice is placed in charge of the Hudson's Bay Company post at Ward Inlet in Frobisher Bay. He lives and hunts with the Inuit, sets out trap lines, helps the community survive an outbreak of influenza, takes a native "wife", and is given the name Issumatak, "he who thinks."
The ending left me with a profound sense of loss. As Maurice sails away from Ward Inlet to his next post, leaving behind the friends with whom he shared such hardships and joys, and knowing he will never see them again, we close the last page knowing that this is also the story of a lost world.
Sadly, this was Edward Beauclerk Maurice's only book. It was being prepared for publication when he died in 2003. He poured his entire life into it, and what a life it was.