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Books
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Living With Wildness: An Alaskan Odyssey
University of Alaska Press, 2008
Living in Alaska, author Bill Sherwonit has a wealth of superlative natural landscapes and animal encounters with which he could dazzle readers, and he does manage to include some high-adrenaline scenes in this book. But for the most part (and to my delight), Sherwonit has eschewed hyperbole in order to walk a more challenging, thoughtful, and authentic path: balancing Alaska drama, which has little relevance to most Americans’ experiences, with the quiet, everyday moments and reflections that connect us all to the wildness just outside our doors. In "Living with Wildness," Sherwonit employs both a journalist’s skills and a non-specialist’s sense of humble wonder to deliver a portrait of the wild in its many guises. Though northern experiences take the main stage, his Connecticut childhood memories are particularly moving and instructive, reminding us all of the importance of early, unmediated experiences with nature. Throughout the book, Sherwonit taps the expertise of local natural history experts and mentors, weaving their observations and studies with his own, more personal discoveries. If next year I take more walks, notice more birds and small mammals, grant my children a little more outdoors freedom, and manage to escape the city in search of darker, star-filled nights, it will be because of "Living with Wildness." Just reading it made me feel more connected to the place I call home.
-- Andromeda Romano-Lax, author of "Searching for Steinbeck’s Sea of Cortez" and "The Spanish Bow."
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Other Books:
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To the Top of Denali: Climbing Adventures on North America's Tallest Peak
Alaska Northwest Books, 1990, revised second edition, 2000
From the foreword by Art Davidson, author of MINUS 148°:
“Few of us will ever have the opportunity to climb Denali, but writer Bill Sherwonit can take all of us to the mountain’s highest reaches. An Alaskan, Sherwonit lives close to the mountain’s presence. A climber himself, he has scaled Denali.
As a writer, Sherwonit transports us not only to the mountain, but into the drama of the great expeditions. In an informative, fast-paced narrative, he brings alive the heroics of the pioneers who tried to make the first ascent and of those who followed, putting up ever more harrowing routes on the mountain’s steep ridges and walls. “Here in one book are the great moments of mountaineering on Denali. . . . It is a pleasure to welcome this book, which offers insight and tales of great adventure for both advanced climbers and all the armchair explorers who wonder why people climb mountains.”
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Iditarod: The Great Race to Nome
Alaska Northwest Books, 1991 (out of print); Sasquatch Books,
IDITAROD recounts the history of the Iditarod Trail and three decades of Alaska’s “Last Great Race,” from its pioneer origins and first Native and rural mushers, to the rise of early champions and the advent of record-breaking times set by today’s racing professionals. Sherwonit’s text is complemented by Jeff Schultz’s stunning images from the trail.
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Alaska’s Accessible Wilderness: A Traveler’s Guide to Alaska’s State Parks
Alaska Northwest Books, 1996
Alaska’s State Park System is the nation’s largest and grandest.
Encompassing 3.2 million acres, it contains some of our country’s premier wilderness. ALASKA’S ACCESSIBLE WILDERNESS focuses on six of the state’s wildest, most alluring parklands. Five of the six offer an inspiring mixture of remoteness, wildlife, scenic vistas, and outdoor recreation. The sixth is famous for its wildlife, specifically bald eagles. These are places of glaciers and unscaled mountains, of centuries-old forest and high alpine tundra, of salmon-rich streams, vast lakes, and remote islands, of grizzlies and wolves, moose and swans.
For all their wildness and unspoiled beauty, these parklands
are remarkably easy to reach and, in most cases, easy to explore.
In essays and photographs, Bill Sherwonit paints vivid portraits of the parks. Woven throughout the text are suggestions for wilderness travel, including information on backcountry safety, camping, bear-human relations, user fees, air-taxi travel, and more. Visitor information is included for each of the parks, with tips on getting there, when to go, facilities, and services, activities, and weather.
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Alaska Ascents
Alaska Northwest Books, 1996
Edited and compiled by Bill Sherwonit, this anthology gives
voice to Alaska’s great peaks and to the people who have climbed them. ALASKA ASCENTS takes readers to all of the state’s major
mountain chains -- the St. Elias, Wrangell, Coast, Chugach,
Alaska, and Brooks Ranges -- and to many of its grandest peaks,
from Denali to St. Elias, Fairweather, Foraker, Hunter, Moose’s
Tooth, Devil’s Thumb and the Kitchatna Spires. The storytellers
in this collection reveal the challenges of Alaska’s mountains,
among the most inaccessible and difficult to climb in all
of North America. Through these mountaineering stories, we
learn about the people who are drawn to scale such peaks and
who experience the triumph of the spirit and sometimes tragedy
and loss. Sherwonit includes an introduction to each story,
to provide context on the mountains, the expeditions, the
climbers.
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Alaska’s Bears
Alaska Northwest Books, 1998
Alaska is truly bear country and ALASKA’S BEARS is the first
pocket-sized guide to the state’s three species of bears:
polar bears, black bears and brown bears (or grizzlies). Bill
Sherwonit’s writing provides an easy reading natural history
for each species, from their appearance and behavior to yearly
cycles, ecological niches, and relationships with humans.
The text also includes helpful information on visiting Alaska’s
bear-viewing sites, tips for safe travel through bear country,
and excellent photos by longtime Alaskan Tom Walker.
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Denali: A Literary Anthology
The Mountaineers Books, 2000.
Denali, “The High One” (Alaska’s Mount McKinley), has beguiled
story-tellers since time immemorial. In this wide-ranging
anthology spanning 101 years of published writings -- representing
both the northern classics and little-known gems -- editor
Bill Sherwonit gives us a taste of a rich literary legacy.
Explorers, mountaineers, naturalists, Native Alaskans, adenturers,
and homseteaders, the storytellers of DENALI powerfully portray
the wild spirit of The Mountain. They tell us of the landscape’s
dangers, its obstacles and abundant wildlife; and they share
its allures, whether gold or high mountain summits, snow-white
sheep or wilderness solitude. In reading these stories, we
also learn about the men and women who are drawn to this special
place, who find hope, challenge, inspiration -- and sometimes
sorrow -- in Denali and the broad shadow The Mountain casts.
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Denali: The Complete Guide
Alaska Northwest Books, 2002
This is the most comprehensive guidebook to one of America’s
best-known parklands. DENALI: THE COMPLETE GUIDE contains
sound advice about getting the most out of your trip to Denali
National Park and Preserve and neighobring Denali State Park.
Written by someone who’s explored the region for more than
two decades, this guidebook emphasizes discovery over directions.
Learn about the area’s natural history, human history, wildlife,
transportation options, sightseeing opportunities, safety
tips, and more. Checklists for mammals, birds, and plants
are also included, as are maps and photos.
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Wood-Tikchik: Alaska’s Largest State Park
Aperture Foundation, 2003
Alaska’s vast Wood-Tikchik State Park affords breath-taking
vistas and a habitatas undisturbed and balanced as any that
remains on this planet. Landscape photographer Robert Ketchum
turns his lens to these beautiful wildlands. Yet today, the
Wood-Tikchik landscape is in danger of fragmentation and exploitative
development, which would destabilize the park’s cycle of life.
Ketchum’s astonishing photographs and Bill Sherwonit’s thoughtful
accompanying essay make it abundantly clear that this vital
land is far too valuable to jeopardize through careless commercialization.
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Travelers' Tales Alaska
Travelers Tales, Inc., 2003
From the introduction, by David Roberts: “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 Wal*Mart” 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 backcountry on earth . . . [yet] in the present
collection there are twenty-six voices ranging, with a thoroughly
postmodern sense of irony, across a dozen themes more ambiguous
than survival or wilderness.”
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