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    Correcting the Landscape

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    by Marjorie Kowalski Cole


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    • ISBN-13: 9780060786076
    • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
    • Publication date: 12/26/2006
    • Pages: 240
    • Product dimensions: 5.31(w) x 8.00(h) x 0.54(d)

    Marjorie Kowalski Cole's poetry and fiction have appeared in numerous journals, including Chattahoochee Review and Alaska Quarterly Review. Her essays have appeared in the Los Angeles Times, American Poetry Review, and Poets & Writers. She lives in Ester, Alaska, with her husband, Pat Lambert.

    Read an Excerpt

    Correcting the Landscape

    A Novel
    By Marjorie Cole

    HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.

    Copyright © 2006 Marjorie Cole
    All right reserved.

    ISBN: 006078606X

    Chapter One

    Evolution did not intend trees to grow singly. Far more than ourselves they are social creatures, and no more natural as isolated specimens than man is as a marooned sailor or hermit.

    -- John Fowles, The Tree

    Sandra Leasure, M.D., a widowed physician and subscriber to my weekly newspaper, the Fairbanks Mercury, came home one September afternoon to her house on the Chena River where she had lived for twenty years, a few miles outside Fairbanks. She sat down at her kitchen table, turned her head as usual to take in the river, and shrieked. She jumped up and shouted in her empty house, "What happened to the trees?"

    Across the river the mixed spruce-birch forest had disappeared, chewed up by heavy machinery. Chopped and splintered wood covered the ground. She looked over a sheared wasteland to the George Parks Highway. The highway had been there for years, behind the trees; suddenly it was almost in her living room.

    Sandra stared at the revision of her landscape for a while before she reached for the telephone and called us. It may seem an odd choice, to call a small weekly newspaper rather than, say, the mayor's office or the department of planning and zoning, but, she told me later, "I had to make an instant decision and I didn't want to hear a spokesperson." Instead, she happened to get me, the editor and publisher, just putting down my pen from crossing out half an editorial that wasn't going well.

    "Up and down the bank," she told me. "The shock of my life. The trees are gone."

    I like Dr. Leasure. When I took over this newspaper a year and a half ago, she responded immediately to our call for subscribers and donors. She was also a nice doctor. My sister Noreen and I had seen her a couple of times, before she retired. Kind of woman you felt chivalrous toward, although she'd managed fine on her own in Alaska for several decades. I didn't know what to say about the trees being cut, except that for starters I'd drive on over and take a look.

    I stuck my head into the newsroom to see if anyone would like to come along.

    My sister Noreen, chief reporter, supply officer, and adviser, was fixed in front of a computer screen. She hammered on the keys as though it made a difference how hard you hit them. Her blue eyes had gone ice cold; she chewed her lips. Must have been working up that interview with a marine biologist on the long-term effects of the Exxon Valdez oil spill. I looked around for someone else.

    A journalism student from the university, hired by Noreen to sell display ads for us, stood nearby noting something on the dummy that lay on the light table. Gayle Kenneally was a quiet Alaska Native, and one of those older students who have lived awhile before they decide to finish a degree. A single mother, I think Noreen told me. I didn't know Gayle well at all. She stopped in with a couple of ads twice a week and rarely spoke, but she seemed like pleasant company. I'd seen her with a camera. Maybe she needed a subject for her photography class.

    "Ms. Kenneally," I said, a bit on the hearty side as I stepped into the room. "A story's come up. Maybe. Bring your camera today?"

    She had three blue lines tattooed on her chin, above them a shy and pleasant smile. Freckles. Mixed heritage, like the rest of us.

    "Yeah, I can come along," she agreed.

    "Grab an extra can of film." I waved toward the supply cupboard. We operated hand to mouth at the Mercury but so rarely did our own photography that I knew there'd be film left from Noreen's last shopping trip.

    My Honda wouldn't start right away. It wasn't going to make it through the winter. Gayle didn't say a word.

    On Dr. Leasure's two acres, every birch tree was wrapped in chicken wire to discourage the beavers. But across the river, wood was scattered as though it had been through a grinder. The emptiness that faced us made no sense. Robbed of context, you couldn't even get angry. I stood there trying to see the land as it might have looked a day before: impossible. The look on Dr. Leasure's face, however, was unmistakable. She was moving from shock to grief. Those trees weren't coming back.

    Gayle and I drove over the highway bridge and parked to walk over the cut ground. Splinters covered the earth like a suffocating blanket. Not a thing was standing. It smelled pungent, but nothing moved.

    This time of year in the woods, yellow leaves fill the air. They float right off the trees at every shiver of wind as the whole place strips down for winter. But here nothing moved, and the aspen leaves on the splintered branches around us were already fading to brown. Gayle began to take photographs. She was so quiet, I almost forgot she was with me, except that I started to hand out orders as if she couldn't think for herself. "Get one with this carnage in the foreground and the doc's house in the background," I said. She knelt down and tried to do just that. I stared at her and realized I'd been obnoxiously barking commands.

    "Gayle, thanks," I said, when she stood up. She nodded. "The doc is a friend," I added. "An interesting lady. She doesn't deserve this."

    "I wonder what they are going to put in here," said Gayle.

    "Well, we need to find out." There was a moment's silence as we walked back to my car. I thought about it.

    "Would you be interested?" I said.

    "In what?"

    "Pursuing this. Start with a few calls to the borough, find out who owns this property, call the owners, and go from there. Gather a little information. What do you think, do you have that kind of time?"

    Continues...


    Excerpted from Correcting the Landscape by Marjorie Cole Copyright © 2006 by Marjorie Cole. Excerpted by permission.
    All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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    The editor of a small weekly newspaper in Fairbanks, Alaska, Gus Traynor is an independent spirit whose idealism has survived numerous tests. When big business interests threaten the breathtaking wilderness he cherishes, he joins forces with his best friend—an often self-serving developer—to take on the forces of progress. Soon, in his determination to preserve the dignity and heritage of his community, Gus is learning more than he has ever imagined about the region's colorful mix of opportunists, dreamers, and artists. But his mission is complicated by the discovery of a young woman's body floating in the river . . . and by the blossoming of an unexpected love.

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    Publishers Weekly
    The publisher of a Fairbanks, Alaska, weekly newspaper finds himself tested by matters of love and money in Cole's resolute first novel. Gus Traynor has run the Mercury for 15 years, aided by his fiery sister, Noreen, but these days costs are up and ad sales are down. The paper's difficulties come at a bad time for Gus, a likable and sometimes reluctant gadfly who, after many years of bachelorhood, finds a new reason to fight for his paper's longevity: part-time journalist Gayle Kenneally, a single mother from the native village of Allakeket whose thoughtful, unhurried self-possession capture Gus's attention and ultimately his heart. In Gus, Cole has crafted a sympathetic, winning everyman with a believable mix of pragmatic and contemplative impulses. Cole's attention to an ongoing litany of town issues, on the other hand-the debate over a controversial book; a logging bill-never come alive, but read instead as a lackluster strategy to ratchet up tension. The novel's characters, and their tentative, fully felt interactions in the service of building friendships and love-especially Gus's nervous, endearing, faltering attempts to get closer to Gayle-are at the story's heart, and propel it forward with quiet force. (Jan.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
    Library Journal
    Confessions from a contemporary St. Augustine dominate Alaska native Cole's complex debut, which earned the 2004 Bellwether Prize. Protagonist Gus Traynor edits The Mercury with an eye toward raising the consciousness of Fairbanks, AK, residents. That goal becomes difficult after a series of controversial articles prompts advertisers to withdraw their support, which nudges the paper toward bankruptcy and sends Gus into an existential tailspin. Readers concerned with social justice will appreciate the struggling editor's polemics on censorship, race, and class, while others will relish Cole's skillfully executed passages describing a dazzling landscape repeatedly scarred by ecological crises. Most interesting, perhaps, are Gus's quirky friends and colleagues, who include an Irish expatriate poet and a good-natured land developer with a morbid fascination with heavy machinery. In fact, readers hoping to learn more about them might be somewhat disappointed by the novel's focus on Gus's personal growth. However, Cole's argument that "Readers need to read for what's left out," coupled with her heartfelt, insightful storytelling, more than justifies her use of the first-person limited perspective. Recommended for large public libraries and regional collections.-Leigh Anne Vrabel, Carnegie Lib. of Pittsburgh Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
    Kirkus Reviews
    This earnest debut novel, winner of the Bellwether Prize for "fiction of social responsibility," wavers along the fine line between the true-to-life and dull-as-ditchwater. Narrator-hero Gus Traynor, 50ish editor of an alternative newspaper in Fairbanks, Alaska, wrestles with ecological issues, the paper's dwindling circulation and imminent insolvency and his shy passion for a single mother from a native village. Cole's depiction of Alaska is not of the natural beauty viewed from cruise ships, but of a land menaced by clear-cutting and bad legislation, with a native population plagued by poverty and substance abuse. Traynor's humility and integrity make him a likable fellow, but he is given to embarrassing cliches-"the notion of running a newspaper took hold of me like a flower blooming in my soul"-and for the first three quarters of the novel, he simply putters around town. He watches a friend's New Age girlfriend carve an ice sculpture; he participates in a community drive to pick up trash. He hires an itinerant Irish poet, who "couldn't quite get the hope out of his face" to write features, that may in part explain the paper's insolvency. It is a work by this fictional poet, Felix Heaven, which gives the book its title. The poem-and Cole makes a fine job of it-describes the arrogant statues erected to honor various lords and conquerors, and celebrates the "necessary correction" of pulling them down. The work spurs Traynor and a land-developer friend to get tough with a "First Family" sculpture, described as "pointlessly huge," in a Fairbanks plaza. Cole's determination to withhold the easy pleasures of fiction, the drama of a driving plot, juicy relationships, happy endings-in favor ofworkaday inconclusiveness, and the unromantic problems of real life, is admirably mature. The trouble is that, having forsaken certain pleasures, Cole's work offers only the soberest and most intermittent glimmer of any other reward.

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