More About the Author
Tom Walker, the author of over a dozen books centered on Alaska, has lived in Alaska for almost 45-years. "Alaska has been the greatest gift of my life and I would live nowhere else." He has been a wildlife conservation officer, wilderness guide, loghome builder (shoulder surgery prempted that career), wildlife and nature photographer, and freelance writer. In his early years, "before the anesthesia of youth wore off," he followed the rodeo circuit, after a stint as a horse packer in the eastern High Sierras in his natal state of California. Like many others, the military took him to Alaska, where he mustered out and sank roots. Walker now lives in a log house on the very edge of Denali National Park, and despite the sometimes extreme winter weather - down to -50f in winter - he finds the rural life fulfilling. "If it weren't for the long, dark and cold winter, I probably would not be a writer because I would always be out somewhere in the woods or on the tundra." He has won awards for both his photography and his volunteer work with Alaska wildlife issues. His two volume history of McKinley Park (1902-1930 era), now renamed Denali National Park, took almost 30 years to complete the interviews, research, and multiple rewrites. "A labor of love, I guess, but I wonder if I would have continued had I known what I was getting into at the outset. The fabulous, truelife stories uncovered, worthy of Robert Service and Jack London, kept me going."