"A fine piece of work and a great delight."--John McPhee
Christine Jerome decides to repeat the 266-mile Adirondack canoe
journey of George Washington Sears (pen name "Nessmuk"), a famous
adventure and nature writer for the popular magazine "Forest and
Stream" in the late nineteenth century. Part of what made his 1883
journey remarkable was the length of his canoe--a mere nine feet.
The "Sairy Gamp" was the lightest of cockleshells, but could
navigate rough lakes and stony rapids. Sears could heave it over
his head and portage it between lakes for miles. So Jerome has a
similar canoe built for herself, and sets off to see what has
changed and what has remained on the water trail through the
mountains.
The result is a classic of canoe literature: a beautiful paean
to journeying silently in light craft. Her nature writing and
knowledge of local history lends a depth and substance to every
mile. She conjures up Teddy Roosevelt, the Whitneys and
Vanderbilts, as well as old hermits and eccentrics. She tells of
legendary crimes committed along the lakeshores, while keeping her
expert ear tuned for birdsong in the trees.
An unforgettable account of traveling by canoe, and traveling
back in time.
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