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    Alaska: Tales of Adventure from the Last Frontier

    by Spike Walker (Editor), Spike Walker (Introduction), Denise Little (Preface by)


    Paperback

    (First Edition)

    $20.75
    $20.75
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    • ISBN-13: 9780312275624
    • Publisher: St. Martin's Press
    • Publication date: 02/18/2002
    • Edition description: First Edition
    • Pages: 288
    • Sales rank: 267,145
    • Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.72(d)

    Spike Walker has spent more than twenty seasons working as a deckhand aboard commercial fishing boats in Alaska. He has voyaged across storm-tossed seas from the ports of Kodiak in the Gulf of Alaska to Dutch Harbor in the Aleutian Islands and north, across the Bering Sea, to the edge of the polar ice cap in search of king crab, halibut, and codfish. His first book, Working on the Edge, was hailed by James Michener as "the definitive account of this peilous trade." With his books Nights of Ice and Coming Back Alive, Spike Walker's growing reputation as one of America's greatest authors of true Alaskan adventure tales has been firmly established.

    Table of Contents

    Prefaceix
    Introductionx
    Living on the Edge
    Too Little, Too Late - Excerpt from Nights of Ice3
    Lost and Adrift - Excerpt from Danger Stalks the Land20
    Excerpt from Dangerous Steps28
    The Iditarod
    Excerpt from Winterdance45
    Excerpt from Iditarod Classics: Interviews with Libby Riddles, Rick Swenson, and Susan Butcher54
    Excerpt from Running North66
    The Great Explorers
    Excerpt from Bering's Voyages75
    Excerpt from Astoria, or, Anecdotes of an Enterprise Beyond the Rocky Mountains87
    Yukon and Mackenzie Exploration - Excerpt from The Dominion Illustrated, 189091
    The Discovery of Glacier Bay95
    Gold Rush
    1898112
    Gold Hunters of the North122
    Article from The Dyea Trail, January 19, 1898134
    Klondike Outfit List137
    Getting There: How to Go - Article from the April 1, 1898, issue of The Klondike News140
    The Dog Nuisance - Article from the Dawson Daily News, May 23, 1900146
    To Build a Fire147
    Natural Wonders
    Excerpt from Monarch of Deadman Bay165
    Alexander Archipelago and the Home I Found in Alaska178
    Black Gold
    Excerpt from Who Killed Alaska193
    Far Trek205
    An Arco Epitaph208
    Modern Adventurers
    Males For Sale: Cheap, Hairy217
    Excerpt from Arctic Son221
    Excerpt from Goodbye, Boise ... Hello, Alaska256
    Alaskan Voices
    Excerpt from Edgar Kallands273
    Excerpt from Simeon Mountain279
    Excerpt from Goodwin Semaken284
    Galena - Excerpt from Josephine Roberts, Tanana291
    Don't Laugh ... It's Not Funny!
    Housekeeping in the Klondike297
    Still a Few Bugs in the System303
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    For thousands of years Alaska has called to us. The hardy souls who first answered that call endured bitter temperatures, maddening isolation, and often harrowing adventures for the privilege of living there, and many lost their lives in the process. From the earliest human explorers to Russian fur trappers, from Klondike gold seekers to today's miners and oilmen, from Alaska's native people to the millions of tourists who visit the state every year, people have come to Alaska to marvel at its beauty, rejoice in its riches, and measure themselves against its challenges. The wonder of Alaska, as well as its terrifying dangers, come to life in this anthology, featuring true adventures described by some of the best writers in the world, each hand picked by bestselling writer and Alaska aficionado Spike Walker. Alaska: Tales of Adventure from the Last Frontier will open your eyes and stir your soul as it celebrates the untamed beauty of Alaska.

    Inside you will find unmatched tales of adventure by the following authors:

    Spike Walker

    Jack London

    Larry Kaniut

    Roger A. Caras

    Lew Freedman

    Dana Stabenow

    Gary Paulsen

    Jean Aspen

    Ann Mariah Cook

    John Muir

    Washington Irving

    And many more...

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    From the Publisher
    "...a crackerjack collection of evocative writings from the state, spread over time and geography." —Kirkus Reviews
    Kirkus Reviews
    Fast becoming the dean of Alaskan adventure writing, Walker (Coming Back Alive, 2001, etc.) assembles here a crackerjack collection of evocative writings from that state, spread over time and geography. The selection of well-worn material could easily have come from a commonplace book of passages-in some cases, whole stories or articles-on Alaska. A few are pure adventure and dread, such as Larry Kaniut's account of a man drowning after his legs get stuck in a mudflat. Others showcase Alaskan institutions like the Iditarod, caught best by Gary Paulsen in first-hand experience with that great, numbing race. No collection of this sort would be complete without Jack London's "To Build a Fire," perhaps the best-known Yukon story of all time, but Walker also finds room for London's fine profile of gold prospectors. "No Christian martyr ever possessed greater faith than did the pioneers of Alaska," writes London, but even he is outdone in bleakness by the excerpt from Richard Matthews's The Yukon: "They arrived to claim their reward and found that it was claimed already; there was no good ground left to stake and thousands to stake it." The saving grace of his tale is in the humor as prospector after prospector is done in by the crazy circumstances. "Hope dies hard," notes Matthews, "and in its terminal agonies it is not particular about its sustenance." Mind you, the descriptions of how to get to the gold fields run by the Klondike News in 1898 should have been enough to send prospectors right back home. The gold-rush section is certainly the strongest here, but all of it is worth reading, from Jan Aspen's fictional account of hunting to Dave Brown's dry observations on the rapacious world ofthe Trans-Alaska Pipeline, "the most interesting fiasco I have ever been allowed to participate in." A pleasure even for those who simply like the idea of Alaska, let alone pine to go there.

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