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-   -   Alaska Fiction? Recommend a Book, Please (https://www.fodors.com/community/united-states/alaska-fiction-recommend-a-book-please-341853/)

sludick Apr 11th, 2008 06:41 PM

Alaska Fiction? Recommend a Book, Please
 
Hi, fellow Fodorites! We're taking a vacation to Alaska in late May. I'd like to gift a friend who is traveling with us with an entertaining fiction set in Alaska. Not sure what she likes (mystery, romance, etc.), but she has read some books set in Seattle and seems excited to see Seattle because of them. Too bad we won't be in Seattle, except for a late night arrival-early morning departure.

Any favorites out there? We'll arrive in Anchorage and go up towards Denali & Healy -- although it is really early for those areas and so she might want to spend some time relaxing with that book. After that, we'll take a one-way cruise from Seward to Vancouver, so those subjects would be a good area as well.

Looking forward to any suggestions, thanks.

DebitNM Apr 11th, 2008 06:48 PM

Yiddish Policeman's Union, by Michael Chabon.

Deb

Gardyloo Apr 11th, 2008 06:49 PM

Any of Dana Stabenow's mysteries.

Best read - ever - involving an imaginary Alaska, and one of the best books I've read in the past several years, <i>The Yiddish Policemen's Union</i> by Michael Chabon. I'll never think of Sitka the same way again.

like_2travel Apr 12th, 2008 01:01 AM

&quot;Alaska&quot; by James Michener


farrermog Apr 12th, 2008 03:47 AM

It's not fiction and I haven't read it (as yet), but based on other books by Jonathan Raban I have read and your friend's interest in Seattle, I would think she may enjoy his <i>Passage to Juneau</i>.

peggionthego Apr 12th, 2008 04:24 AM

I echo the recommendation for Dana Stabenow. Also, (not fiction) Into the Wild.

Bobmrg Apr 12th, 2008 08:07 AM

Dana Stabenow writes excellent mysteries placed in Alaska.

enzian Apr 12th, 2008 09:23 AM

Sitka resident John Straley, 2006 &quot;writer laureate&quot; for the State of Alaska, writes great mysteries.

Some more suggestions, although non-fiction:

Coming into the Country, by John McPhee

Good Time Girls, by Lael Morgan---the true story of the &quot;ladies of the night&quot; who lived and worked in the gold camps during the Klondike gold rush

sludick Apr 12th, 2008 05:39 PM

Ya'll are great, thank you so much. Keep the recommendations coming; I may pick up one or two for me as well. :-X

jnjfraz Apr 13th, 2008 07:31 AM

Non fiction but a good book

Klondike: The last great gold rush by Pierre Berton

ucsbalum Apr 17th, 2008 09:21 AM

I second &quot;Alaska&quot; by James Michener. Reading this made my trip to Alaska last summer that much more interesting.

Also, Into the Wild -- though it's not fiction, it might as well be! The film is amazing as well (although it's not all set in Alaska).

Bobmrg Apr 17th, 2008 10:29 AM

I started Dana Stabenow's &quot;Prepare for Rage&quot; and gave up. It is not about Alaska, it is about Mid-East terrorism, Katrina, the Carribean, etc.

Having put 20 years in the Coast Guard, I cannot get my head around how she uses titles instead of names: &quot;How are you this morning, Lieutenant Commander?&quot; might be an example (that I made up). We used last names for enlisted personnel, &quot;Captain&quot; for the captain (duh), and &quot;Mr. Smith&quot; etc for the rest of the officers.

pttyyoder Apr 17th, 2008 11:02 AM

With Drop City, T. Coraghessan Boyle offers proof that he has become one of America's most prolific, gifted storytellers. Set in the 1970s, Boyle entertains readers with the denizens of &quot;Drop City,&quot; a counterculture California commune that welcomes anyone wanting to live off the grid, use drugs, and practice free love. Boyle sublimely captures the sociology of its rebellious members, who doubt the sincerity or beliefs of newcomers, express some insecurity about nonconformity, and chastise outsiders while remaining oblivious to their own hypocrisy. Marco, Pan, Star, and other &quot;cats&quot; and &quot;chicks&quot; live hassle-free until dissention and cries of racism mount amid increasing run-ins with the local government (a young girl is raped, installation of a sewage system is mandated, a mother lets her toddlers drink LSD-laced juice). Seeking refuge, the citizens move north, to Alaska, to reinvent their utopia, but soon learn the natural environment is more unforgiving of a lackadaisical lifestyle.

Drop City is funny, evocative, and well-paced, shifting between the hippies and the Alaskan locals--primarily Sess and his new bride Pamela (a city dweller who arranged stays with several trappers over a few weeks to determine whom she would marry)--until the two cultures collide. Balanced between plot and character, Boyle excels at describing the physical world and his characters' interaction with it, whether portraying the harshness (or sheer beauty) of the Alaskan wilderness, the simple survival routines of its grizzled inhabitants, or the sounds wafting through Drop City: &quot;the goats bleating to be milked or fed, the single sharp ringing note of a dog surprised by its own hunger, the regular slap of the screen door at the back of the house--and underneath it all, like the soundtrack to a movie, the dull hum of rock and roll leaking out the kitchen windows.&quot; Truly American in spirit, Drop City is a strong novel of freedom and those in pursuit of lives of liberty. --Michael Ferch --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

cheribob Apr 17th, 2008 10:11 PM

I am another vote for &quot;Alaska&quot;.

Another good book is &quot;Mrs. Mike, the Story of Katherine Mary Flannigan&quot; by Benedict &amp; Nancy.

It is not set in Alaska but it is a great book about life in the Yukon Territories. It was a very moving book.

hetismij Apr 18th, 2008 12:39 AM

Northern Lights by Nora Roberts, if she is into mystery/detective fiction.

GJLinda Apr 18th, 2008 06:15 AM

Hello,

Sue Henry writes enjoyable mysteries featuring a female musher. They are fun to read and Alaska becomes one of the characters.

As for Dana Stabenow, try the earlier ones that are about Alaska.

Kristal_Kurran Mar 16th, 2011 09:05 PM

Hi,
I wrote a book called "Alaska's Wanderlust". It is a book of short funny stories about Territory of Alaska living. It will keep you laughing for a while plus make you stop and think what it was like in those days. I hope everyone enjoys it as much as I enjoyed writting the book.

Kristal_Kurran Mar 17th, 2011 01:19 PM

Another good book is "Wild Moments" Adventures with animals of the north by Michael Engelhard. It is very, very good!

tomfuller Mar 17th, 2011 01:29 PM

Any of the works of Robert Service. http://www.freemasonry.bcy.ca/biogra...sam_mcgee.html
The link is to "The Cremation of Sam McGee" on this St Patricks Day.


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