UPDATED WITH ADDITIONAL RECOMMENDATIONS
Whether you are planning to visit Alaska or are an armchair traveler, the following are books that I commend to your attention, in no particular order. Selections below include poetry, fiction, cartoons, and non-fiction (natural world, true crime, autobiographies and history). I will add to this blog over time.
Whether you are planning to visit Alaska or are an armchair traveler, the following are books that I commend to your attention, in no particular order. Selections below include poetry, fiction, cartoons, and non-fiction (natural world, true crime, autobiographies and history). I will add to this blog over time.
FICTION
Poetry: Robert Service
Sample
titles: books: Songs
of a Sourdough (1907) with “The
Shooting of Dan McGrew” and “The
Cremation of Sam McGee” and The
Spell of the Yukon and Other Verses.
Service is
such a well known poet in Alaska that schools are named after him, but the fact
is that he lived in Canada (Dawson City, Whitehorse, Vancouver), never Alaska. Even so, Alaskan school children used to
(maybe they still do, some places) have to memorize one of his ballads to
deliver to the class or on, paper, to the teacher. I highly recommend one of his slim books of
verse to anyone interested in immersing himself or herself in the sights,
sounds, and smells of the Gold Rush era.
His poems, with a driving rhythm that cries out to be read aloud (even
to yourself) capture the loneliness and risks braved by men and women confronted
by conniving men and women, as well as by weather, animals, topography, greed
and hubris. Each poem is a well told
story with plot twists and emotional recoil – shifting between humor and pathos.
Service was the most commercially successful poet of his age, derided by “high-brow”
writers for writing doggerel and verse, rather than poetry. That was fine by him. And by me.
Touching
fiction: Eowyn Ivey:
Sample title: The
Snow Child
Ivey’s first
novel is one that has attracted attention and translations faster than you can
say “October snowfall.” I have
recommended it to many of my friends because this is one of the few books about
Alaska that that describe the arctic winter, not as a danger to be overcome
(like Jack London’s tales), but as stunningly beautiful – a privilege to
behold. Her depiction of a yellow birch
leaf flowing below the clear, icy surface of a creek is one such image early in
the novel, followed by many others. Her
marvelous sense of place grounds a story that is also graced by a compelling
plot populated by believable characters (married homesteaders in the 1920s and
their nearest neighbors) who transition through experiences, over time. This book describes some of the challenges
and joys I have discovered in my little log cabin in the middle of nowhere in
ways that I hope my friends can appreciate through this author’s skill.