Alaska Books
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Definitely worth carrying along on the tripReview Date: 2001-08-11
A highly recommended "take along" tote.Review Date: 2000-07-03
Fantastic guidebook with great reviews and storiesReview Date: 2001-12-04
A "Read Before You Go" BookReview Date: 2005-01-14
A Great Guide for A Great LandReview Date: 1999-10-20

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A view of Alaska's past.Review Date: 2008-02-06
Loel Shuler's voyage of discoveryReview Date: 2006-08-02
Said with that unique combination of awe and respect that Alaska seems to elicit, the word "Alaska" alone is enough to garner attention. Loel Shuler had both, plus the curiosity and determination to learn all she could about her adopted home. "Alaska...in the Wake of the North Star" is the story of her literal three-month voyage of discovery aboard the North Star as it made its annual 11,000 mile circuit between Sitka and Point Barrow.
Like most who come to call Alaska home, Shuler came to the realization that to know a small part of Alaska isn't to know Alaska. First begun in the 1950's, then tucked away for nearly fifty years, "Alaska in the Wake of the North Star" is an intriguing, thought provoking look at a world that largely no longer exists, but one that helped shape Alaska and Alaskans. Graced by artwork by Rie Munoz, as well as photos provided by the author, it's a book that should be read.
The Alaska described by Loel Shuler is no more, although traces of it echo in remote areas of the state. Yet, even today, it's difficult to imagine leaving family and friends to undertake such a voyage. Shuler and her fellow passengers weren't passengers on a cruise ship. Instead, they sailed on what might today be deemed simply a cargo ship that carried passengers.
As it made its ports of call, Shuler, pregnant at the time of departure, documented the trip and those ports of call. You can almost feel the cold on your skin at times as she describes being hoisted aboard via a net, not nice, safe steps, and fruitlessly returning time after time to the docks on-shore for hazardous trips back to the ship, a procedure that occasionally lasted for days. Yet, while her frustration occasionally shows, so to does her respect for the culture she was seeing played out before her. Perhaps her most vivid memory is of the friendship shown by total strangers. That's an aspect of Alaska that still rings true today, I might add.
More than a half century into the future, it's often intriguing to realize how "right-on" her observations were, particularly in regard to the death of the culture she found so intriguing and bewildering. Given Alaska's designation today as a popular tourist stop, her comments about how tourist-ready some of the villages had become even then, one has to wonder where Schuler got her psychic abilities. Yet, in the face of death, the Native cultures did what they had to in order to survive, adapting to and playing to those who came in awe and curiosity. Shuler had nothing but admiration for those struggling to preserve their culture in the face of 1950's progress and it shows.
Today one can only look at her intriguing photos of King Island, for instance, and wonder what it must have been like to live in one of those houses-on-stilts built into the side of a mountain. What must it have been like to scale steep slopes to reach your "refrigerator," a labyrinth of frozen caverns in the mountainside? You feel her exhilaration as she descends a steep incline in the seated position, while still having time to marvel at the dexterity of the Native children who skipped, hopped, and darted about seeming oblivious to the danger.
Sadly, King Island is no more. It didn't end with a bang, but with a quiet sigh as those leaving the island on annual trips outside increasingly chose not to return. Ironically, most King Islanders left aboard the North Star as it made its circuits to remote ports of Alaska. Fewer and fewer made the return journey until finally, there were no more. King Island was just a memory, once captured forever in time for us by Schuler.
The overall tone of the book is at once curious and accepting. Shuler made no effort to judge those she met in her journey. Her tale of the dilemma faced by an Elim teacher, himself a Native, as he struggled to reconcile Alaskan reality with faceless bureaucracy is heartbreaking. Shuler judged neither. Instead, she took from encounters what she could, waiting a half-century before she documented her journey of the mind and body for the public. As for many of us, real life took precedence and her journals weren't put into book form until long after her journey. It's a journey that will pull you in and make you feel as though you, too, are a part of "Alaska...in the Wake of the North Star."
Part Memoir and Part Travelogue - Well worth the reading!Review Date: 2006-08-11
Shuler (who was pregnant with her first child during this rugged odyssey) offers a one-of-a-kind snapshot of every day life in coastal Alaskan communities in the summer of 1950 - - shortly after the war, before statehood, before the pipeline, before tourism, even before bathtubs, and weeks before the Soviets exploded their first atomic bomb.
Her natural and unaffected prose reads like a letter written to loved ones back home, full of the details and revelations that make such correspondences worth savoring. Like the cliff dwellers of Alaska's King Island, the lifestyles and communities she describes have literally vanished in the short half-century since. This is a rare and memorable addition to the small collection of books about the people who make their home in our 49th state.
Alaska. In the Wake of the North StarReview Date: 2007-01-20
by Loel Shuler
This book accomplishes the goal for which so many historians strive. Loel Shuler has given us a rare and entrancing look into life along coastal Alaska in 1949. She has both informed and entertained. Her experience in the publishing field, and her keen eye for detail uniquely qualified her to chronicle one aspect of Alaskan life, one which has mostly faded away.
She has combined incite and careful research into this fascinating account of her journey on the ship, North Star, in its annual supply trip from Seward to Pont Barrow and ports of call in between. The picture is far different from the tourist oriented portrayals to which we have become accustomed. Loel Shuler writes with clarity and human feeling about a people and a way of life which have nearly disappeared, and is to be found in villages which, today, have taken on an almost museum-like quality, similar to Plymouth Village.
The story is enhanced by the artwork of Rie Munoz, who gives us an interpretation of primitive Alaska native art. Prospective readers should not make the mistake, as I did, of thinking that the cover art indicated book for children. It is for all of us.
Brian Fortier
An engaging look back at Alaskan people and cultures.Review Date: 2006-08-10

20+ years later still well lovedReview Date: 2008-10-04
For anyone searching: this is the one. An easily irritated moon carries off a child and her friend (brother maybe), Lupin, goes on a quest through dark primeval forests of the pacific northwest to save her. From a five year olds perspective this story is epic. I think the thing that stands out the most are the illustrations: dark blues and bright orange, two tiny little kids in a vast, malevolent world.
Good message, suspense and fun!Review Date: 2005-07-16
One of my favoritesReview Date: 2002-06-19
wonderful for childrenReview Date: 1998-08-01
Caldecott Honor Book filled with wonderReview Date: 1998-12-27

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Quite interesting readReview Date: 2007-05-21
A MUST READ FOR 1ST TIME OWNERSReview Date: 2005-07-12
amazingReview Date: 2000-06-06
An inspiration which has lasted over 35 years.Review Date: 2001-06-28
Having recently rescued two white wolves and being privileged to enjoy their friendship and listen to their songs, Arctic Wild has once again brought special meaning to my life.
I would like to see Arctic Wild made a required reading for all junior high and high school aged children for they are the fertile ground for changing attitudes. Of all the animal stories I've read and written, Arctic Wild stands above the rest.
Magical - A book like this comes along once every 1000 yearsReview Date: 2001-01-05
Well along the lines of "Ishmael", except this is pure non-fiction.
Arctic Wild will fascinate you and fill you with a sense of awe and joy, the likes of which you've never felt by reading a book.
To say that this book was wonderful would be a terrible understatement - you may never read a book like this again the rest of your life.

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Ain't No Stopping Her Now! The Curly Tailed Dog Who CouldReview Date: 2007-10-28
Anna is a beautiful husky who is the runt of her litter. She and her littermates train for a 2,500 - 3,000 mile run that will take them an estimated six months.
The curly tailed dog and her littermates are followed as they are being trained for the run. Mushers and dogs alike work well together; the bond of cooperation between them is not only strong; it is paramount.
The beautiful husky, once dismissed because of her small size proves herself to be up to every challenge during the training and the run. The Little Husky Who Could can take her place with Akiak, another husky who proved her stamina and determination even when her mushers wanted to retire her. An excellent family, classroom and general discussion book, the message can never be shared enough. This wonderful book makes me think of McFadden & Whitehead's 1979 classic, "Ain't No Stopping Us Now" and Matthew Wilder's 1983 hit, "Ain't Nothing Gonna Break My Stride."
A hit with our local elementary kids!Review Date: 2007-04-15
Beautiful story, fantastic illustrations, strong positive message!Review Date: 2005-10-03
Great book!Review Date: 2003-12-12
Anna's small; and small dogs aren't usually what mushers want in their teams. But Pam sees Anna has a big spirit and is curious, intelligent, willing to learn and a hard worker. So even though Anna's young, Pam puts her where her exceptionally-good leader, Douggie, can teach Anna the ropes of that critical position. Then things happen; and physically-small Anna is "big enough" to do what needs to be done. She saves not only Douggie but also the expedition.
I'd read "Alone Across the Arctic" (also by Pam Flowers with Ann Dixon,) and admired Pam's own fortitude, intelligence and perseverance. I wanted to know more about the adventure. Here's a gold nugget of a book that does that. And it's well written; both youngsters, and the adults who may share it with them, will read it all the way through...several times.
The great illustrations (paintings) by Bill Farnsworth perfectly capture the story and the attention of young children. I love looking at them each time, too.
This is a great Christmas present. If you've finished your shopping, surprise everyone for Valentine's Day.
Exquisite, no matter what your ageReview Date: 2003-11-01

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Homesteaders First year in Alaska's WildernessReview Date: 2005-09-10
The CheechakoesReview Date: 2000-05-31
These are great reads. I highly recommend them for all ages.
A really good honest book about Southeast Alaska.Review Date: 1997-11-06
I KNOW THE AUTHOR AND FAMILY, THIS IS A TRUE ADVENTURE.Review Date: 1998-06-14
Loved the adventures in AlaskaReview Date: 2002-03-20
I bought it at a garage sale when I was 12, and I still enjoy re-reading it. I thought it had gone out of print, and wouldn't loan it to anyone for years for fear of losing it.
The only disturbing part is that wildlife (fish, mink, bears and seals) are something to be harvested and/or cleared away for the people. Loads of animals meet their maker in this book.


Giving authors their dueReview Date: 2005-01-13
At the edge of the senses.Review Date: 2001-06-17
Readers will cross open ground in these essays and enter the natural world, becoming immersed in its much larger meanings. "Wildlands preserve complex biological relationships that we are only dimly, or sometimes not at all, aware of" (p. 80). These essays are rich in wilderness wisdom, enough wisdom to please any fan of Ed Abbey or Wendell Berry. "We grasp what is beautiful in a flight of snow geese rising against an overcast sky as easily as we grasp the beauty of a cello suite," Lopez writes; "and intuit, I believe, that if we allow these things to be destroyed or degraded for economic reasons we will become deeply and strangely impoverished" (p. 38). He quietly observes, "wilderness can revitalize someone who has spent too long in the highly manipulative, perversely efficient atmosphere of modern life" (p. 82).
Whether I'm reading his stories or essays, Barry Lopez is among my favorite writers. He will bring you to the edge of your senses: "Everything found at the edge of one's senses--the high note of the winter wren, the thick perfume of propolis that drifts downwind from spring willows, the brightness of woodchips scattered by beaver . . .all this fits together" (pp. 149-50).
G. Merritt
Door to a cathedral of natureReview Date: 2001-01-06
There are reflections on the role of biologists, from communicating between scientists and shipmates in the arctic to their role in a whale stranding. Perhaps he thinks biologists have greater insight, but he also understands the need for mystery and direct experience.
For Paul Winter fans there is a description of the raft down the Grand Canyon that produced the album "Canyon". As a current update, the snow geese written about in one essay are continuing to boom and damage their arctic breeding grounds.
The Eyes of WonderReview Date: 2004-06-15
Due to when this book was written, there are a couple of references to former President Reagan's "environmental record" written in real time.
There were so many essays that I loved, including the one speaking of traveling the river with Paul Winter. I am going to quote a passage from "Children in the Woods".
"The quickest door to open in the woods for a child is the one that leads to the smallest room, by knowing the name each thing is called. The door that leads to the cathedral is marked by a hesitancy to speak at all, rather to encourage by example a sharpness of the senses. If one speaks it should only be to say, as well as one can, how wonderfully all this fits together, to indicate what a long, fierce peace can derive from this knowledge."
Food for the soulReview Date: 1998-08-04

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Get this if you are going for more than a day or two.Review Date: 2005-12-17
A great guide, but look for the new edition.Review Date: 2005-11-11
This book has a lot of great suggestions for day and overnight hiking trips. Also, Waits gives lots of practical advice earned from his years of experience. He goes right down to which side of the bus is better to sit on to get pictures while heading into the park and where to sit heading out. I would highly recommend this book, except that the new edition has more of everything that makes this book great.
Best guide to Denali National ParkReview Date: 2004-12-28
Great Book to Help you PlanReview Date: 2004-07-11
Now i have the proper materials to go to Denali i hope my dreams become reality next summer.
Best book on Hiking in DenaliReview Date: 2001-12-27

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A book to be snowed in with!Review Date: 1997-04-17
Sheila Nickenson presents Alaska as a vast unforgiving terra incognita where death awaits the missing. Her essays on the lost--and sometimes found--of Alaska demonstrate emphatically it's not a place to be stranded in. For example, the immense interior glaciers offer no quarter. Even with today's sophisticated technology, the lost remain lost. Their bodies are not found; their fates are known to God. Most of the modern day missing are victims of plane crashes. (There are parts of our 49th state that are only accessible by airplane. Juneau, where the author resides, is one example.)
In earlier times, the late 1700s to the earlier part of the 20th century, the missing were members of expeditions and the Navy. Many of the dead sailors were "harvested" by the Cold Reaper in the flower of their youth.
Interspersed among the essays for the dead are meditations on: Sheila's life in Juneau, her publishing experience as a poet, her New England childhood, the "politics" of teaching Alaskan prisoners, the joys and insights of educating children about poetry, being a mother and wife, the flowers of Alaska--what flourishes and what perishes--and her personal ordeal about a missing friend
read itReview Date: 1998-08-11
Disappearance DiscoveredReview Date: 2000-05-27
This book is as much a meditation on love as it is on loss.Review Date: 1998-03-17
A Remarkable Memoir and HistoryReview Date: 1998-07-06
As someone who once lived in Alaska and liked good books, I could never understand why our state didn't produce more of them. Apart from Robert Service and a few essayists (Joe McGinnis, John McPhee), few talented writers have made Alaska their subject, and even fewer have handled it successfully. It is a melancholy commentary on Alaska that the most faithful representation of the state in the Lower 48 was the television show Northern Exposure.
Although the state has many dedicated writers, few have written material that was regarded as exceptional. Although many luminaries have visited, few were impressed with the home team. I found this particularly frustrating because other small, cold, places - Iceland or Denmark, for example - had developed rich and distinct literary traditions.
Doubly frustrating because the chance was there. You can't do regular literature in Alaska. Something about the place resists anything conventional. The problems an author might write about in say, Spokane, seem out of place or mis-scaled when set in Alaska. (This intractability extends far beyond literature - experienced mountain climbers from elsewhere are routinely killed in Alaska, talented pilots from the Lower 48 crash there, perfectly good ships sink off its shores.)
But this problem is also an opportunity, for the artist willing to go for broke. To succeed, she would have to invent new tools and take a radically different approach from the authors of the Lower 48. To misuse an analogy from Updike, the successful Alaskan author can't hope to hug the shore - she must build her own boat, and head straight out to the sea, with all the risks and rewards that entails.
Sheila Nickerson, a Juneau resident who was the state's poet laureate from 1977 to 1981, has taken up the challenge. The book is a history and a memoir. The history she reports is full of dangerous projects and unexplained disappearances. She dedicates long passages to great vanishings in the far north, from the! Franklin Expedition of the 19th century to congressmen Nick Begich and Hale Boggs in the early 1970s. But mostly Nickerson reports smaller vanishings: An old man gets off a ferry in Juneau and is never heard from again. A young man walks up a heavily-travelled trail and vanishes. A colleague disappears on a flight:
"Kent Roth, a fishery biologist with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, has gone down with two brothers and two friends on a flight from Yakutat to Anchorage. It is an immense area, one that has swallowed people from the earliest times of its recorded history."
Throughout the book Nickerson intersperses her own story with this disappearance and the ensuing search. She also reports on the stacatto interruption of accidental death that is the hallmark of day-to-day life in Alaska:
"Flipping through search-and-rescue news releases at the Coast Guard headquarters at the federal building in Juneau, I quickly find a terrible sameness to the stories. The reports usualy continue from three to five days. If the case is large, or unusual, reports continue for a week or even two weeks. Then, for the most part, there is blankness."
Observing that the Alaskan Shamen were wiped out by protestant missionaries, she rushes to fill the void with any spiritual tool that can find purchase - the tarot, feng shui, dreamwork, bird messengers, ghost stories from her childhood. She is impatient with the stern, inscrutable Protestant God (perhaps her distant and angry father, who ultimately disinherited her, has something to do with this). Ironically, this is one place where that stern patriarch seems plausible. Such a God is a mere curiosity in a literary, affluent place like New York, Paris, or Peking. But He fits well where nature kills suddenly, unexpectedly, and arbitrarily. Nickerson never goes there - if that's the deal, she doesn't want it.
Only late in the book does she hint that she sees the awful possibility that there is no order, spiritual or otherwise, to it all:
"! ;There is a framed original chart from the Cook expedition to Alaska in 1778 - Cook's last before he turned south to Hawaii and death at the hand of native Hawaiians. The chart, in pencil, was executed either by Cook or by Master William Bligh... It is a working chart of Unalaska Island, out in the Aleutians, made during the summer as Cook and his men headed north to Icy Cape, at the edge of the Frozen Sea. There, just off the coast of the island, in a faint but elegant hand, this notation:
'All this 30' west of the truth' "
But even when her spiritual guides fail her (perhaps I should write 'especially'), the book marches powerfully on, because it is not driven by a spiritual force, but by Nickerson's relentless intellectual engagement. She becomes discouraged, but she never gives up. When one line of attack breaks down, she shifts to another.
It would be unfair to try to say this book has succeeded or failed. As with most Alaskan enterprises, success is a relative thing. A successful Alaskan expedition is one in which no one gets killed. Nickerson is generous with partial credit to explorers who got home with at least some of their shipmates. She has succeeded well on those terms - she's built her boat, gone to sea, and come back.
She succeeds in other ways as well. The whole book is pitched at a high level, far higher than Alaskans expect of local writers. Nickerson's full of talent - she writes in a clear direct voice, and, her protests notwithstanding, she has a pretty good idea of what she's trying to accomplish. This is the kind of a book that might be viewed someday as a cornerstone of Alaskan literature, one of the moments when Alaskans started writing things the rest of the world wanted to read.
Only Nickerson knows if the literary achievement was accompanied by a spiritual one. Alaska is particularly unkind to those who come seeking spiritual development. The sea and wilderness seem to have a special fondness for killing sojourners and utopians. It is a place where what does no! t destroy you tries to cripple you so it can get you next time. As McGinnis discovered, there are a lot of damaged people in those bars and cabins. In this game, holding your own is a big victory.
I think Nickerson held her own.
Sheila Nickerson, Disappearances: A Map, New York: Harcourt Brace, 1996.
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A Must Have for anyone who works with FAS childrenReview Date: 2002-06-19
A must have for any parent, caregiver with FAS/FAE childrenReview Date: 2000-03-19
This is my "bible"Review Date: 1999-03-01
Fantastic Antone SucceedsReview Date: 2000-03-03
A must have for parents and caregivers of FAS/FAE childrenReview Date: 1999-11-23
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