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A journey to Alaska's remote roadless villages, during a time of
great historical transition, brings us this enduring portrait of a
place and its people. Alutiiq, Yup'ik, Inupiaq, and Athabascan
subjects reveal themselves as entirely contemporary individuals
with deep longings and connection to the land and to their past.
Tom Kizzia's account of his travels off the Alaska road system,
first published in 1991, has endured with a sterling reputation for
its thoughtful, poetic, unflinching engagement with the complexity
of Alaska's rural communities. Wake of the Unseen Object is now
considered some of the finest nonfiction writing about Alaska. This
new edition includes an updated introduction by the author, looking
at what remains the same after thirty years and what is
different-both in Alaska, and in the expectations placed on a
reporter visiting from another world.
"Into the Wild" meets "Helter Skelter" in this riveting true story
of a modern-day homesteading family in the deepest reaches of the
Alaskan wilderness - and of the chilling secrets of its maniacal,
spellbinding patriarch.
When Papa Pilgrim appeared in the Alaska frontier outpost of
McCarthy with his wife and fifteen children in tow, his new
neighbors had little idea of the trouble to come. The Pilgrim
Family presented themselves as a shining example of the homespun
Christian ideal, with their proud piety and beautiful old-timey
music, but their true story ran dark and deep. Within weeks, Papa
had bulldozed a road through the mountains to the new family home
at an abandoned copper mine, sparking a tense confrontation with
the National Park Service and forcing his ghost town neighbors to
take sides in an ever-more volatile battle over where a citizen's
rights end and the government's power begins.
In "Pilgrim's Wilderness," veteran Alaska journalist Tom Kizzia
unfolds the remarkable, at times harrowing, story of a charismatic
spinner of American myths who was not what he seemed, the
townspeople caught in his thrall, and the family he brought to the
brink of ruin. As Kizzia discovered, Papa Pilgrim was in fact the
son of a rich Texas family with ties to Hoover's FBI and strange,
oblique connections to the Kennedy assassination and the movie
stars of "Easy Rider." And as his fight with the government in
Alaska grew more intense, the turmoil in his brood made it
increasingly difficult to tell whether his children were messianic
followers or hostages in desperate need of rescue. In this powerful
piece of Americana, written with uncommon grace and high drama,
Kizzia uses his unparalleled access to capture an era-defining
clash between environmentalists and pioneers ignited by a
mesmerizing sociopath who held a town and a family captive.
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