Alaska Books
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How Alaska wilderness was savedReview Date: 2005-04-25

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A striking showcase of dolls and dollmakingReview Date: 2006-07-08

Wintering in the Alaskan Brooks RangeReview Date: 2007-01-22
Ingstad recounts the difficulties of life in an region where temperatives are below zero for months at a time where virtually all resources had to be earned from the environment. As Ingstad notes, store-bought goods beyond rifles and catridges were rare; the Nunamiut were highly proficient caribou hunters and made good use of the few resources offered by their immediate environment, such as willow wood for tools, fire, and tent poles, and moss for weatherproofing caribou skin tents. The Nunamiut displaced periodically by dog sledge to track the caribou or to camp near sources of wood. Ingstad's accounts of hunting trips are especially vivid, as the Nunamiut practiced skills honed over generations.
Ingstad did his best to capture the dynamics of the small community in which he lived. The Nunamiut, without television or radio, relied on traditions of story-telling and song to entertain each other and to train their children. Ingstad is successful in sketching some of the social customs that allowed the Nunamiut to live in close quarters and depend on each other without a formal structure of government.
Ingstad's account is especially poignant in that the nomadic lifestyle of interior Alaska was dying out even as he made his observations. Contact with the European communities would bring a adaption to more permanent settlements.
This book is highly recommended to those interested in life at high latitudes. Ingstad's account is limited in the sense that he could only observe the Nunamiut for a relatively short time, but it is a highly readable and sympathetic portrait that he provides.

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Fabulous alphabet / Northwest photo bookReview Date: 2005-12-05

I've read this one 3 times.Review Date: 2000-02-17

Offers interviews recorded in 2002 and 2003 with some of those who observed - and escaped - the tsunamis that dayReview Date: 2006-05-23

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Home IS where the heart is.Review Date: 2000-06-11
The economy in Southeast Alaska depended for a long time on timber harvest as one of its foundations. That is changing and has changed. In her chapter "Thoughts on Trees: Who Could Live Without This Grace?" Carolyn takes us on a very different journey than one might expect. This is no purely "greenie" diatribe but a thoughtful and wide-ranging conversation about value, comunity, value-added, nature and humanity in its intricate struggle for survival and our constant battle to find and place meaning where it can do either harm or much good.
It is clear throughout this book that Carolyn loves this land and its people and its problems. Falling in love with the landscape over and over again, she reminds us how fragile we are, how implacable are all of nature's forces, and how, if we listen, we can learn.
This is on my "I recommend this book to everyone I know" list. It is also a very good introduction to life in Southeast Alaska.

Great Book for Out of Doors LoversReview Date: 2007-08-12

Used price: $3.77

To Really EnjoyReview Date: 2001-02-20
I could not put this book down until i finished reading it and now it is on my desk as a special every day reading joy, to MAKE MY DAY.
Collectible price: $49.99

i would enjoy having this book againReview Date: 1999-09-09
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The author has a rare understanding of how citizen groups function. He describes how people from diverse backgrounds and different generations, with diverse skills, can pool their efforts to produce a whole that is greater than the sum of its parts.
The author tells much about the interactions among the crucial players working to save wild Alaska: Alaskan conservation activists, national conservation leaders, the two crucial congressional leaders John Seiberling and Morris Udall, Secretary of the Interior Cecil Andrus, and President Jimmy Carter. He gives credit to the millions of people all over the country who wrote letters, spoke at public hearings, and buttonholed their congressmembers.
"Northern Landscapes" is worthwhile reading for anyone who wants to help save wild places. The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is constantly threatened by boomers proposing oil drilling, and the rain forest of the Tongass National Forest still needs more defenders. From Maine to California, each of us in our own part of the United States can find wild places worth saving, and we can join hands with local groups who are organizing to save them.