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Finding True North

First-Hand Stories of the Booms that Built Modern Alaska

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

Melting sea ice and rumbling volcanoes. Sled dogs racing through unnamed valleys.

These were the images that came to mind when Molly Rettig moved to Fairbanks, Alaska to work as a reporter at the local newspaper. An avid environmentalist, she couldn't wait to explore the vast, untamed spaces that had largely been paved over on the east coast. But when her 72-year-old neighbor, Clutch, invites her on a tour of his gold mine—an 800-foot tunnel blasted into the side of his house–she begins to question many of her ideas about Alaska, and about herself.

In Finding True North, Rettig takes us on a gripping journey through Alaska's past that brings alive the state's magnificent country and its quirky, larger-than-life characters. She meets a trapper who harvests all she needs from the land, a bush pilot who taught himself how to fly, and an archaeologist who helped build an oil pipeline through pristine wilderness. While she learns how airplanes, mines, and oil fields have paved the way for newcomers like herself, she also stumbles upon a bigger question: what has this quest for Alaska's natural resources actually cost, and how much more is at stake?

This is a book about all the ways wild places teach us about ourselves. Rettig writes both playfully and honestly about how one place can be many things to many people—and how all of it can be true.

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    • Kirkus

      December 1, 2021
      In this debut nonfiction work, Rettig explores contemporary Alaska and the resource booms that created it. People have been pursuing opportunity by moving to Alaska for a long time--13,000 years, at least. The author arrived in 2010 as a 20-something environmental journalist with a new job at the FairbanksDaily News-Miner. She reported on the state's mix of Native cultures, the energy industry, and the ways in which climate change was beginning to alter life in that part of the world. This book explores these same overlapping interests: "Enormous deposits of gold and copper and oil and gas lurked under lands that had been used for hunting and fishing for thousands of years," the author writes in her introduction. "Alaskans depended on both...creating a constant tug-of-war about how best to use the land, about who should get to decide." Rettig tells the stories of four people who've lived through events that shaped the state, including a man with a gold mine in his house, a self-taught bush pilot, an archaeologist who helped build an oil pipeline, and an Athabascan woman who lives off the land. Along the way, the author tells of how she came to better understand the forces that drew her to Alaska. Rettig is a natural storyteller, illuminating her subjects in rich, penetrating prose, as when she describes 93-year-old bush pilot Al Wright, whom she expected to be like a cowboy: "But with his soft-spoken manner and wire-rim glasses, he seemed more like a professor than a bush pilot, throwing around numbers for payloads and air speeds in the same tone you might use for a lecture on thermodynamics." Over the course of the book, the author weaves personal and historical narratives together with ease, always allowing the people to tell the story of the land in which they live. She also effectively demonstrates that contemporary Alaskans don't exist apart from their surroundings but as part of a complex ecosystem--one that she clearly shows to be in a state of tremendous flux. A finely wrought series of portraits depicting humans' impact on the largest American state.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

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  • English

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