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Entangled

People and Ecological Change in Alaska's Kachemak Bay

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Chronicling her quest for wildness and home in Alaska, naturalist Marilyn Sigman writes lyrically about the history of natural abundance and human notions of wealth—from seals to shellfish to sea otters to herring, halibut, and salmon—in Alaska's iconic Kachemak Bay.

Kachemak Bay is a place where people and the living resources they depend on have ebbed and flowed for thousands of years. The forces of the earth are dynamic here: they can change in an instant, shaking the ground beneath your feet or overturning kayaks in a rushing wave. Glaciers have advanced and receded over centuries. The climate, like the ocean, has shifted from warmer to colder and back again in a matter of decades. The ocean food web has been shuffled from bottom to top again and again.

In Entangled, Sigman contemplates the patterns of people staying and leaving, of settlement and displacement, nesting her own journey to Kachemak Bay within diasporas of her Jewish ancestors and of ancient peoples from Asia to the southern coast of Alaska. Along the way she weaves in scientific facts about the region as well as the stories told by Alaska's indigenous peoples. It is a rhapsodic introduction to this stunning region and a siren call to protect the land's natural resources in the face of a warming, changing world.

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    • Kirkus

      A veteran biologist and longtime Alaska resident explores the region's Indigenous and natural history. In this debut volume of nature essays, Sigman applies the ecology concept of "shifting baselines" --essentially, establishing a new sense of normal after a significant change--to her own life and to Homer, Alaska, and the surrounding Kachemak Bay, where she has resided for many years. The book's pieces draw on the author's work as a researcher and environmental educator. They focus on the connections between the changing populations of fish, mollusks, and marine mammals and the shifts in the human population, both the region's Indigenous communities and the waves of settlers who have migrated from the United States mainland to Alaska for more than a century. The essays are both informative and enjoyable reads, as Sigman does an excellent job of conveying scientific topics to nonspecialist readers. "In the Spirit of the Lamp" shows how the prehistory of a location is deeply connected to its present. In "The Silver Horde," the author makes an effective comparison between artificially breeding salmon and driving a Prius, each solving one problem while contributing to another. The prose is vivid ("Parents exchanged nest duties with courteous butler-like bows before the stay-at-home mom or dad flew off to forage along the north shore"), and the essays provide a clear sense of place and belonging. Readers will discover that Alaska's environmental problems are complex and layered, with competing interests vying for supremacy and outcomes that are clear only in the long term--halibut overfishing, for instance, or the challenges of managing salmon hatcheries. "The Bidarki Story" is one of the collection's strongest essays, following a graduate student's shellfish research that succeeds by treating the Indigenous bidarki harvesters as scientific partners rather than passive subjects. Readers who have never been to Alaska will come away with a clear sense of the landscape and the wildlife and people who inhabit it as well as an appreciation for the work of ecologists. A well-written and deeply intriguing collection of essays on humans and nature in Alaska.

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

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  • English

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