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The Accidental Explorer: Wayfinding in Alaska
 
 
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The Accidental Explorer: Wayfinding in Alaska [Hardcover]

Sherry Simpson (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

February 5, 2008
Alaska is a place of great adventure and exploration. After having lived in the Great Land for nearly all of her life, Sherry Simpson realized that she had not scaled mountains, trekked across wild tundra, or blazed trails through virgin forests. Did that fact make her less of an Alaskan? In the series of essays that comprise The Accidental Explorer, Sherry Simpson recounts the experiences of an ordinary woman confronting the great expanses of water and untracked land in Alaska, as she makes her best efforts to map her sense of place and her sense of self in a land that seems to require exploration of its inhabitants. While undertaking arduous treks into the backcountry, she falls into a glacial river and nearly drowns. On an archetypal epic solo hike, she ruminates constantly on when and whether she should abandon that folly. She writes with both humor and humility, harnessing great powers of observation of the natural world. In a downright scary encounter with a mildly aggressive bear, Simpson shrinks from any supposed Alaskan larger-than-life persona to assume her place on the food chain: an urbanized human who is appropriately afraid of big bears. Simpson also offers up the (less reverent) Alaskan view of Chris McCandles, the wanderer who perished in an abandoned bus near Denali, subject of Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer. Can an ordinary, not especially heroic, person be an adventurer? If she sets out, in a wild place like Alaska, what will she find out there, and what will she learn about the place back home? Throughout this compelling and probing book, Sherry Simpson illuminates the act of exploration as both a feat of extraordinary effort and as an everyday experience.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Personal, provocative prose. This is some of the finest writing to come out of Alaska."—Library Journal "Simpson is one of the best new writers working in Alaska"—Anchorage Daily News "Simpson’s work reflects the sure-footedness of a native Alaska

About the Author

Sherry Simpson's first book, The Way Winter Comes, won the Chinook Literary Award. She teaches creative nonfiction at the University of Alaska, Anchorage, where she lives.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Sasquatch Books (February 5, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1570615373
  • ISBN-13: 978-1570615375
  • Product Dimensions: 5.3 x 0.8 x 8.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #420,338 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Essay writing at its best, April 11, 2008
This review is from: The Accidental Explorer: Wayfinding in Alaska (Hardcover)
The more I read her work, the more convinced I become that Sherry Simpson is not only Alaska's most accomplished essayist, but that she ranks among the best in the nation. The latest proof is The Accidental Explorer: Wayfinding in Alaska. At one level, this collection of 10 personal essays recounts memorable trips into Alaska's wild places (most, but not all, emphasizing her own travels), written by a person who thinks hard about things, is willing to take risks, and has a wonderful talent for self-deprecating humor and story telling. The remote areas she writes about range from Glacier Bay to Denali National Park, the vast flatlands of the Yukon River basin, and an imposingly wild stretch of the Alaska coast that remains unnamed. But the specific places aren't as important as her experiences, lessons learned, questions raised, and the ideas that Simpson mulls in that restless, roving, worrisome mind of hers. Early on she admits to being a fretter. The reader gains as much, if not more, from her fretful and inquisitive mind as from the adventures themselves.

As with the best of essays, these are multi-layered gems. Besides sharing her sometimes funny, other times sad or disconcerting, occasionally frightening, and always humbling passages through Alaska's wilds, Simpson writes movingly and unflinchingly about home and family. One of the strongest essays, I think, is "Fidelity," which in large part reflects upon about a troubled time in her marriage and the importance of what endures. In fact home and wilderness - and various notions of each - are juxtaposed against each other throughout the book and that juxtaposition creates one of the book's delicious tensions. Simpson is also fascinated by both the Euro-American explorers (many of them military men) who made the earliest Westernized maps of Alaska, and Alaska's Original Peoples, who created their own internal maps of the landscape while building a far more substantial and lasting relationship with the places they have come to know over the millennia. Both "The Mapmaker" (which focuses on mapper-and-explorer-turned-homesteader Bill Yanert) and "Hypothetical Geographies" take the reader to unexpected terrain as they consider the various ways we humans "map out" new territories and homelands. There's lots more here: the importance of stories, the dangers of not paying sufficient attention to advice, instincts, or the landscape itself (death and the specter of death are frequent elements of the stories, including a wonderfully provocative piece on Chris McCandless, of Into the Wild fame - or notoriety - in "A Man Made Cold by the Universe"); and the internal tensions carried by a writer who wonders "how could I ever reconcile this constant restlessness with the desire to know and love one place?" The essays superbly blend Simpson's personal idiosyncrasies with larger questions about discovery, longing, imagination, and how it is that each of us finds - or seeks to find - his or her own place in the world.

A final thought: I'd previously read (and in one case, heard) versions of five of the essays included in this collection; and I found each to be powerful and illuminating this time around. In short, these are essays you can return to again and again, and take away some new insight or delight. That's essay writing at its best.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A tale of explorer about someone who is not so much unlike them., May 5, 2008
This review is from: The Accidental Explorer: Wayfinding in Alaska (Hardcover)
You could live in London all of your life, and never see Buckingham Palace. You could live in Washington D.C., and never see the White House. You could live in Alaska, and never see the beautiful wilderness that surrounds you - and that's what happened to author Sherry Simpson. "The Accidental Explorer: Wayfinding in Alaska" is her tale of accidentally discovering the vast natural wonder surrounding her during an epic solo hike across it all, despite not being much of a seasoned hiker. Written with humility versus the nature that she is simply a simple city girl facing vast odds, "The Accidental Explorer: Wayfinding in Alaska" is highly recommended for any true adventure collection and for anyone who wants to read a tale of explorer about someone who is not so much unlike them.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Honest, thoughtful, lushly written account of what it means to explore the world and its inhabitants, March 10, 2008
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This review is from: The Accidental Explorer: Wayfinding in Alaska (Hardcover)
Sherry Simpson's earlier essay collection, The Way Winter Comes, was topnotch. The Accidental Explorer is even better. Her voice has mellowed some since her last book, and this seasoning imparts a difficult wisdom--the price of living an examined life. Two of the essays, "Impedimenta" and "Fidelity," are more than worth the price of the book. Excellent.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
IT WAS THE THIRD NIGHT of our kayak trip in Glacier Bay, or maybe the fourth. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
accidental explorer
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Glacier Bay, Yukon River, Northwest Passage, Peters Glacier, Shem Pete, Bear Mountain, Stampede Trail, Brooks Range, Tanana River, Cook Inlet, Bill Yanert, Fred George, Copper River, Admiralty Island, Susitna River, Teklanika River, Chena River, Mount Susitna, Gastineau Channel, Alexander Supertramp, Wonder Lake, George Vancouver, Joseph Castner, North America, Bad Ass Creek
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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