Polar night stretches for weeks, the aurora paints the snow emerald and violet—and a towering figure the Inuit call Mahoni slips between wind-sculpted drifts. Mahoni of the Midnight Sun: Investigating Wild-Man Sightings in the Inuit North collects twelve deep-field investigations from across Nunavut’s tundra and island coasts. Hunters, RCMP patrols, and even Hudson’s Bay Company traders have all reported the same impossible signs: 50 cm footprints in permafrost, bone-deep howls rolling off fjord walls, and a shadow that vanishes across sea-ice leads at -40 °C. Inside you’ll explore • Aurora Vigil, Kivalliq — campers filming northern lights capture a three-metre silhouette crossing the ice road. • Coppermine River Giant — a solo paddler’s GoPro records thunder-loud footfalls stalking his shoreline camp. • Hudson’s Bay Footprints — 19th-century diary entries match modern drone footage of a bare-foot trackway on tidal flats. • Adlet Legends Reawakened — Inuit Elders link ancient dog-man myths to fresh encounters near Rankin Inlet. Drawing on field notes, cast impressions, and Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit shared with community permission, author Travis Korns weaves camp-fire tension with boots-on-snow research. If you crave an Arctic chill that outlasts the polar night, crack open these pages and decide whether Nunavut’s wild-man still guards the barrens. Click Buy Now to begin the hunt.