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A Republic of Rivers - Three Centuries of Nature Writing from Alaska and the Yukon (Paperback)
Loot Price: R536
Discovery Miles 5 360
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A Republic of Rivers - Three Centuries of Nature Writing from Alaska and the Yukon (Paperback)
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Loot Price R536
Discovery Miles 5 360
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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"The spell of Alaska," Ella Higginson wrote in 1908, "falls upon
every lover of beauty who has voyaged along those far northern
snow-pearled shores...or who has drifted down the mighty rivers of
the interior which flow, bell-toned and lonely, to the sea....No
writer has ever described Alaska; no one writer ever will; but each
must do his share, according to the spell that the country casts
upon him."
In A Republic of Rivers, John Murray offers the first
comprehensive anthology of nature writing in Alaska and the Yukon,
ranging from 1741 to the present. Many of the writers found here
are major figures--John Muir, Jack London, Annie Dillard, Barry
Lopez, and Edward Abbey--but we also discover the voices of
missionaries, explorers, mountain-climbers, Native Americans,
miners, scientists, backpackers, and fishermen, each trying to
capture something of the beauty of this still pristine land, to
render in their own words the spell that the country casts upon
them. The range of viewpoints is remarkable. With Annie Dillard we
look out at ice floes near the remote Barter Island and see "what
newborn babies must see: nothing but senseless variations of light
on the retinas." With Frederick Litke we mourn the senseless
slaughter of sea mammals. We join scientist Adolph Murie, the
father of wolf ecology, as he probes the daily life of an East Fork
wolf pack. And we listen as Tlingit Indian Johnny Jack relates the
difficulty of maintaining a dignified life close to nature at a
time of cultural upheaval for his people. Most of these selections
have never appeared in any anthology and some entries--particularly
those written by early American and Russian explorers--have never
been available to general readers.
There is laughter here and there is sorrow, but finally there is
communion and liberation as generation after generation encounter
the unsurpassed beauty and wildness of the Arctic. Taken together,
these forty-nine men and women provide a unique portrait of
America's final frontier.
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