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Travelers' Tales Alaska

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by Bill Sherwonit




  CRITICAL ACCLAIM FOR TRAVELERS’ TALES

  “The Travelers’ Tales series is altogether remarkable.”

  —Jan Morris, author of Journeys, Locations, and Trieste and the Meaning of Nowhere

  “For the thoughtful traveler, these books are an invaluable resource. There’s nothing like them on the market.”

  —Pico Iyer, author of The Global Soul

  “This is the stuff memories can be duplicated from.”

  —Foreign Service Journal

  “I can’t think of a better way to get comfortable with a destination than by delving into Travelers’ Tales…before reading a guidebook, before seeing a travel agent.

  —Paul Glassman, Society of American Travel Writers

  “Travelers’ Tales is a valuable addition to any predeparture reading list.”

  —Tony Wheeler, founder, Lonely Planet Publications

  “Travelers’ Tales delivers something most guidebooks only promise: a real sense of what a country is all about.…”

  —Hartford Courant

  “The Travelers’ Tales series should become required reading for anyone visiting a foreign country who wants to truly step off the tourist track and experience another culture, another place, firsthand.”

  —St. Petersburg Times

  “If there’s one thing traditional guidebooks lack, it’s the really juicy travel information, the personal stories about back alleys and brief encounters. The Travelers’ Tales series fills this gap with an approach that’s all anecdotes, no directions.”

  —Diversion

  TRAVELERS’ TALES BOOKS

  Country and Regional Guides

  America, Australia, Brazil, Central America, Cuba, France, Greece, India, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Nepal, Spain, Thailand, Tibet, Turkey; Alaska, American Southwest, Grand Canyon, Hawai‘i, Hong Kong, Paris, Provence, San Francisco, Tuscany

  Women’s Travel

  Her Fork in the Road, A Woman’s Path, A Woman’s Passion for Travel, A Woman’s World, Women in the Wild, A Mother’s World, Safety and Security for Women Who Travel, Gutsy Women, Gutsy Mamas

  Body & Soul

  The Spiritual Gifts of Travel, The Road Within, Love & Romance, Food, The Fearless Diner, The Adventure of Food, The Ultimate Journey, Pilgrimage

  Special Interest

  Not So Funny When It Happened, The Gift of Rivers, Shitting Pretty, Testosterone Planet, Danger!, The Fearless Shopper, The Penny Pincher’s Passport to Luxury Travel, The Gift of Birds, Family Travel, A Dog’s World, There’s No Toilet Paper on the Road Less Traveled, The Gift of Travel, 365 Travel, Adventures in Wine, Sand in My Bra and Other Misadventures, Hyenas Laughed at Me and Now I Know Why

  Footsteps

  Kite Strings of the Southern Cross, The Sword of Heaven, Storm, Take Me With You, Last Trout in Venice, The Way of the Wanderer, One Year Off, The Fire Never Dies

  Classics

  The Royal Road to Romance, Unbeaten Tracks in Japan, The Rivers Ran East, Coast to Coast, Trader Horn

  TRAVELERS’ TALES

  ALASKA

  TRUE STORIES

  TRAVELERS’ TALES

  ALASKA

  TRUE STORIES

  Edited by

  BILL SHERWONIT,

  ANDROMEDA ROMANO-LAX

  AND ELLEN BIELAWSKI

  Series Editors

  JAMES O’REILLY AND LARRY HABEGGER

  TRAVELERS’ TALES

  SAN FRANCISCO

  Copyright © 2003 Travelers’ Tales, Inc. All rights reserved.

  Introduction copyright © 2003 David Roberts

  Travelers’ Tales and Travelers’ Tales Guides are trademarks of Travelers’ Tales, Inc.

  Credits and copyright notices for the individual articles in this collection are given starting on page 286.

  We have made every effort to trace the ownership of all copyrighted material and to secure permission from copyright holders. In the event of any question arising as to the ownership of any material, we will be pleased to make the necessary correction in future printings. Contact Travelers’ Tales, Inc., 330 Townsend Street Suite 208, San Francisco, California 94107. www.travelerstales.com

  Art Direction: Michele Wetherbee

  Interior design: Kathryn Heflin and Susan Bailey

  Cover photograph:© Steven Nourse/Getty Images. Aurora Borealis, Alaska Range.

  Page layout: Cynthia Lamb, using the fonts Bembo and Remedy

  Distributed by: Publishers Group West, 1700 Fourth Street, Berkeley, California 94710.

  Library of Congress Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

  Travelers’ Tales Alaska : true stories / edited by Bill Sherwonit, Andromeda Romano-Lax, and Ellen Bielawski.— 1st ed.

  p. cm.

  ISBN 978-1-6095-2072-4

  1. Alaska—Description and travel—Anecdotes. 2. Alaska—History, Local—Anecdotes. 3. Frontier and pioneer life—ALaska—Anecdotes. 4. Outdoor life—ALaska—Anecdotes. 5. Alaska—Biography—Anecdotes. 6. Travelers—Alaska—Biography—Anecdotes. 7. Adventure and adventurers—Alaska—Biography—Anecdotes. 8. Travelers’ writings, American. I. Sherwonit, Bill, 1950- II. Romano-Lax, Andromeda, 1971-III. Bielawski, E.

  F910.5 .T73 2003

  917.9804'51'0922—dc22

  2003014901

  First Edition

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  … Who comes here, to this whiteness, this far and frozen place, in search of something he cannot name? Not wealth, it may be, but a fortune of the spirit, a freshness denied him in the place he came from.”

  —JOHN HAINES, “Stories We Listened To”

  The Stars, The Snow, The Fire

  Table of Contents

  Introduction

  DAVID ROBERTS

  Part One

  ESSENCE OF ALASKA

  Sixty-Five

  JEFF FAIR

  Surrounded by Bears

  ED READICKER-HENDERSON

  The Flyboys of Talkeetna

  JON KRAKAUER

  Kayaking through a Timeless Realm of Rain, Bugs, and B.O.

  BARBARA BROWN

  Eating Edward Curtis at the Ugruk Café

  DANIEL HENRY

  The Only Place Like This

  KATHLEEN DEAN MOORE

  From Scratch

  SUSAN BEEMAN

  Part Two

  SOME THINGS TO DO

  The Great White Philharmonic

  TIM CAHILL

  Woe Is Me

  IAN FRAZIER

  Camping at WalMart

  ELLEN BIELAWSKI

  Taking on the Kenai

  TOM DUNKEL

  Hell Can’t Be Worse Than This Trail

  STEVE HOWE

  Downtown Duel

  NANCY DESCHU

  Point Retreat

  ERNESTINE HAYES

  Part Three

  GOING YOUR OWN WAY

  The Blood of Fine and Wild Animals

  PAM HOUSTON

  On the Pack Ice

  HEATHER VILLARS

  In God’s Back Yard

  NILES ELLIOT GOLDSTEIN

  Seeking Paradise

  ANDROMEDA ROMANO-LAX

  The Last Road North

  PHILIP CAPUTO

  Everything’s Oishi

  MIKE STEERE

  Shot Tower

  DAVID ROBERTS

  Part Four

  IN THE SHADOWS

  Hairy Man Lives

  BILL SHERWONIT

  Would You Be, Could You Be, Won’t You Be (and Why in the Hell Does Anyone Want to Be) My Neighbor?

  MIKE GRUDOWSKI

  Leaving Land Behind

  TOBY SULLIVAN

  I Want to Ride on the Bus Chris Died In

  SHERRY SIMPSON

  Par
t Five

  THE LAST WORD

  In the Giant’s Hand

  NANCY LORD

  Index

  Index of Contributors

  Recommended Reading

  Acknowledgments

  Alaska: An Introduction

  by David Roberts

  With six college friends, I first arrived in Alaska in June 1963, having driven a VW bus up the Alcan (not yet the Alaska Highway) in order to assault the then-unclimbed north face of Mt. McKinley (not yet Denali). As we started hiking at midnight across the tundra toward the Peters Glacier, I was one scared twenty-year-old. At the moment, there were many other places I would rather have been than Alaska. The gigantic, avalanche-swept mountain wall we had chosen to attack, I felt in my gut, would prove too much for the modest talents of our gang, trained as we were on the diminutive crags and gullies of New England.

  Thirty-five days later, as we staggered out of the wilderness, having not only climbed the Wickersham Wall but traversed over both summits of McKinley, I was hooked. Hooked on Alaska—though to be honest, it was Alaska’s mountains that had set the lure. For the next twelve years, I returned every summer, seeking out virgin faces and peaks all over the state. The sheer plenitude of untrodden glaciers and ridges in Alaska dazzled me; I felt like a classical scholar who had stumbled upon a cache of unknown scrolls. In 1967, we even got to name a whole range—the Revelation Mountains—that had never been explored.

  During those thirteen years, Alaska was by far the most real place on earth for me. During the “off-season,” as I trudged through college, grad school, and a teaching career, I longed for the Alaskan ranges as a troubadour poet pined for his unattainable mistress. Yet never for a moment did I consider moving to the 49th state, as several of my alpinist cronies did. On the way in and out of the mountains, what I saw of Alaskan culture dismayed rather than enthralled me. A get-rich-quick opportunism seemed to dominate the sprawling burgs of Anchorage and Fairbanks. The bush was steeped in a frontier ethic, the resourceful pluck of the homesteader leavened by his provincialism. There was no ignoring the xenophobia that ran deep through Alaska’s boom-or-bust mentality, and the squalor and alcoholism that pervaded many an Inuit or Indian village that I visited seemed heartbreaking.

  In my ex cathedra take on Alaska I was, of course, acting like the Eastern snob I was sometimes accused of being. There was, I had to admit, as much provincialism and squalor in Boston or New York as there was in Alaska.

  Still, it was the Alaskan wilderness that spoke to me. Like most mountain climbers, the more passionate I was about new routes on unnamed peaks, the less curious I was about the cultural matrix that embraced that wilderness. It was only as my career as a climber started to taper off that I began to probe deeper into Alaska’s unique and puzzling history and culture.

  As the twenty-six narratives assembled in this beguiling collection testify, I was hardly alone in my response to Alaska. Again and again in these tales, it is the power and peril of the wilderness that the authors celebrate. The rare exceptions—Ellen Bielawski’s “Camping at WalMart” or Mike Grudowski’s mordant portrait of Whittier—only reinforce the centrality of wilderness in Alaskan life, by evoking parodic inversions of the myth of the limitless outback. This emphasis is not surprising. Alaska does indeed teem with some of the most magnificent and daunting back country on earth, on the edges of which a mere 627,000 inhabitants (55 percent of them nestled in Anchorage and Fairbanks) cling to their livelihoods. As a result, the literature of Alaska, unlike that of, say, Tuscany or Virginia, focuses almost obsessively on man’s (and woman’s) encounter with nature.

  Thirty years ago, Margaret Atwood, in a polemic called Survival, argued that Canadian literature would never come of age until it got over its preoccupation with adventurers battling the wilderness. As a feminist, Atwood saw this fixation as a predominantly male hang-up. At its core, “survival” was reduced for Canadian writers to a morally simplistic, anti-intellectual machismo.

  Does the same stricture hold for Alaska? I think this anthology of some of the freshest writing in recent years makes a strong case to the contrary. The classic Alaskan narratives of the first half of the twentieth century—works such as Belmore Browne’s The Conquest of Mount McKinley, Charles Brower’s Fifty Years Below Zero, and Robert Marshall’s Arctic Wilderness—wove lyrical and heroic fantasias around the monotonic theme of an explorer or pioneer confronting the wilderness. In the present collection, in contrast, there are twenty-six different voices ranging, with a thoroughly postmodern sense of irony, across a dozen themes more ambiguous than survival or wilderness.

  And yet, in Traveler’s Tales Alaska there lingers (as I would guess is true for very few other places in the world) a fundamental choose-up-sides distinction between writers who live in the state and those who hail from Outside (the metaphoric tag could not be more apt). At its most tendentious, the attitude of Alaskans toward writers (and travelers) from the Lower 48 is that they can’t possibly get it right. The countervailing prejudice (exemplified in Joe McGinnis’s brilliantly unfair Going to Extremes) is that Alaskans, being country bumpkins, are best explicated by a visitor from the heartland of American sophistication (read the East Coast)—just as three generations of Victorian colonialists thought they had better takes on Borneo or Sudan or India than anybody who had the misfortune to be born and raised in those benighted purlieus.

  Nowhere is this us-them dichotomy more vivid than in the reception of the bestseller Into the Wild. The Alaskan response to Jon Krakauer’s evocation of Chris McCandless’s demise, as he tried to live solo off the land north of Denali, was more negative than the book garnered anywhere else in the world. The knee-jerk Alaskan fix on McCandless/Krakauer could be paraphrased as, “One more clueless, screwed-up hippie buys the farm ’cause he doesn’t know what he’s doing up here. Why romanticize and glorify the poor sucker?”

  Yet McCandless’s saga proved to have a universal resonance. In this volume, Sherry Simpson’s complex meditation, “I Want to Ride on the Bus Chris Died In,” captures the full spectrum of reactions to McCandless’s unwittingly symbolic quest and fate, and thus punctures the ultimately foolish us-versus-them split between writers and witnesses who live in Alaska and those who visit from Outside.

  In this context, the editors have performed a salutary service by saving for last Nancy Lord’s wonderfully wistful essay, “In the Giant’s Hand.” Lord, who moved to Alaska in the wake of a profound wilderness experience in the Brooks Range at the age of nineteen, and who has lived there ever since, manages to look back on the naive idealist she once was from the vantage point of three decades of living in and writing about the 49th state. In a mere eight pages, Lord dismantles the us-them dichotomy (for she is both in one person), finding her own truths in the universal human dramas of desire and aging and coming to terms with one’s own mortality. Here is the kind of writing that, we can only hope, Alaska will provoke from her celebrants as the twenty-first century unveils new ways of comprehending the Great Land.

  David Roberts is a mountaineer and adventurer who has climbed the 20,000-foot Quenehar in Argentina to discover the remains of Inca sacrificial victims, made the first descent of the Tekeze in Ethiopia, and been stranded in China during the Tiananmen Square massacre. He has journeyed from academia where he was an associate professor of literature, to Alaska and the Yukon where he led thirteen climbing expeditions (including more than six first ascents), to the literary world where he has written or edited sixteen books and won numerous awards, including the Prix Méditerrané, the Prix du Salon de Livre de Passy, the Prix d’Autrans, and the American Alpine Club Literary Award. He has also written for National Geographic, Outside, Smithsonian, The Atlantic Monthly, The New York Times Magazine, Travel and Leisure, Conde Nast Traveler, and more.

  PART ONE

  ESSENCE OF ALASKA

  JEFF FAIR

  Sixty–Five

  A transplanted Easterner gets a cold reception in the far, frigid north.

/>   A FEW YEARS AGO I LEFT BEHIND MY JOB, THE OLD family cookstove, several loved ones, and Magalloway Maine, to make my way to Alaska once and for all. My plan was to travel overland in the American tradition, staying in touch with the landscape and its climates and thus better understand the meaning of my journey. I chose January because it was earlier than June or even April. Couldn’t wait to get going.

  Shortly after the holidays, I packed the Trooper (outfitted with a new engine-block heater, cord slithering out through the grille like the tongue of a snake) with all the worldly possessions that fit, inverted the canoe on top, summoned my travel companions (a pair of Brittany spaniels), and motored off.

  We made good time to the Missouri River, with one ominous sign: The venison I’d stowed in the bow of the canoe began to thaw. At fifty-four degrees in Mitchell, South Dakota, not a patch of snow in sight, I had to buy ice. In January. I felt spiritually deprived, but things improved by way of a cold front near Shelby, Montana. In a motel lot in Whitecourt, Alberta, I plugged in the block heater for the first time, barely able to suppress my glee. Twenty below.

  The following night in Fort Nelson, British Columbia (forty below), not a room was available. “Oilman’s convention,” the clerk explained. “Your best bet is Fort St. John.” But that was the wrong direction. I phoned ahead and secured a room at Toad River Lodge, 122 miles up the road according to my map. I asked what time they closed.

  “What time you coming through?” asked the proprietress.

  “I’m leaving Fort Nelson now,” I said.

  “If you’re not here by ten we’ll come up the road looking for you.”

  “You’re kidding,” I said.

  She was not, and scribbled down a description of my rig. By ten P.M. I had parked by the lodge and was feeling around the grille for my electrical cord. A woman appeared at the door.

  “I have a block heater,” I explained.

  “Congratulations,” she said. “Everyone else just lets their motor run.” Something about the modern plastic belts that turn brittle at forty below and shatter to pieces at morning ignition.

 

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