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Steam Laundry [Paperback]

Nicole Stellon O'Donnell
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

January 1, 2012

Steam Laundry is a novel in poems based on the true story of Sarah Ellen Gibson, a miner’s wife during the Klondike and Alaska gold rushes. Her journey began as she followed her husband to Dawson City, Yukon Territory in 1898. She stayed there three years as the town’s boom and her marriage burned out. In 1903, she left her husband and sons to start over in Fairbanks, Alaska with another man. Based on archival research and incorporating historical documents and photographs, the poems approach the past through the ghosts of correspondence.
 
The poems, written in the voices of Gibson, her family members, and the people who knew her, take on love, loss, failure, and desire. Some confront the drama of failed marriages, troubled family relationships, and alcoholism. Others spin the dramatic details of hunting accidents and subarctic survival into compelling stories in verse. They embody the opposing voices of an era during which men and women struggled in different, but overlapping, universes.
 
By staring at Gibson through the spectral lenses of the people around her, the documents she left behind, and the vision of a contemporary poet, the particulars of Gibson’s life are transformed into an exploration of the people history usually forgets. Steam Laundry offers the reader the chance to try on the dusty, mining-town overcoat of Gibson’s life.

 


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Editorial Reviews

Review

“This collection of poems about those who came to the Yukon and Alaska over a century ago in search of gold and a better life is a compelling read. I could feel the bitter cold of the landscape and the desires and passions of the characters as I read poem after poem unable to put the book down until I reached the end. This is a book that deserves to be read.”
—Tom Sexton, former Poet Laureate of Alaska


Steam Laundry is a great story, poems that work research into narrative art. These are the stories of the earth, broken for gold, and of the women whose work doing laundry made possible difficult but ambitious lives. One family goes in search of gold. We readers find gold here in this brilliant book that won’t be put down!”
—Hilda Raz, author of TRANS and What Happens


“In O’Donnell’s narrative of familial and social history, we experience Alaska—its financial and romantic allure—and the gender disparities that defined frontier reality in the early 20th century. Readers meet Sarah Ellen Gibson, her marriage “so new/I could hold it in my palm /like an egg still warm/ from the henhouse.”  We learn that “where men prospect, women wash” and witness Gibson’s struggle to “wring/our living out of this frozen dirt.”  O’Donnell’s research yields unsparing details that vivify daily life in the Yukon Territory; she honors women who build laundries and roadhouses, making a place for themselves under unrelenting emotional and physical conditions.  This book-length sequence will hold you in its spell.”
—Robin Becker, author of Domain of Perfect Affection

About the Author


Nicole Stellon O'Donnell's poems have appeared or are forthcoming in in Prairie Schooner, Passages North, Bellingham Review, Beloit Poetry Journal, The Women's Review of Books, and other literary journals. Her essays have appeared in the Anchorage Daily News, and she has been a commentator for the Alaska Public Radio Network. She was recently nominated for a Pushcart Prize. In 2007, the Rasmuson Foundation granted her an Individual Artist Award to support the writing of the poems in Steam Laundry.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 144 pages
  • Publisher: Boreal; First Edition, First edition edition (January 1, 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1597092282
  • ISBN-13: 978-1597092289
  • Product Dimensions: 0.5 x 6.8 x 8.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.1 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #620,844 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Novel in Poems and Letters February 13, 2012
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Having lived in Fairbanks for 44 years, I was delighted to read this novel told in poems and letters about Sarah Ellen Gibson, the sixth woman to arrive in Fairbanks. She came during the goldrush of 1903, following her husband Joe who had traveled north several years previously.

Known as Nellie, Ms. Gibson's life is celebrated fictionally and through actual documents. The reader learns about her husband's drinking and philandering as he tries to hit a gold streak while she is in San Francisco raising two children. Her husband, Joe, says:

I confess the saloon
has swallowed our marriage.....

I didn't think I'd be the man I've become.....

I will go after a new life
if you will follow and bring our boys.
We can bury the past under tailings.

When she finally arrives in Fairbanks, she takes in ironing, sewing and washes clothes for others.

While Mother, steam burns and sweat,
hands as raw as a plucked hen,
knots her full purse. Even poor men need washing,
and the rich, they have no time to sew.
The Old Man digs and stinks
while she makes the living.

Sarah Ellen, known as Ellie, takes care of her family, putting up with her husband's dream of hitting pay dirt and his narcissistic meanderings.

Nellie comes to life through the wonderful writing of Nicole Stellon O'Donnell who manages to capture life during the goldrush and a true sense of time and place through her beautifully evoked imagery and words.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars steam laundry July 8, 2012
By AKCoug
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
This is a wonderful look at history and the Gold Rush told in poetry form.
It includes historical receipts and pictures. Based on fact and actual
letters but filled in by fiction, this tells the story of a man and his
family and the Gold Rush. My only complaint is that by virtue of brevity,
I was left wanting to know more of the story.
Everyone I have shared this with has been equally enamored (male and female).
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Almost there but not quite April 26, 2012
By Kara
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Oh, how I wanted to love this. O'Donnell tells the story of Sarah Ellen Gibson, or Nellie as she prefers, through a series of poems told from the perspective of Nellie and those around her. The poems are broken up into three parts: Nellie and her husband being separated while he searches for his fortune, Nellie and their two sons joining her husband and toughing it out in Alaska, and Nellie abandoning her family to move to Fairbanks with the man she loves. The poems are backed by research which was the most compelling aspect of the collection.

This collection is part poetry and part historical fiction and unfortunately didn't fully satisfy me on either front.

My expectations of poetry may be too high--I like it to be chock full of meaning, transcendent. Even for ordinary events. Poetry should make the ordinary extraordinary. These poems occasionally got there for me, but usually the significance of the events seemed to be lost rather than enhanced by the medium.

As far as the historical fiction side goes, I needed more. I wanted to delve even further into Nellie's life: the decisions she made and why she made them. Or if I couldn't get the why (and this goes back to the poetry thing), I wanted to feel what she felt.

Maybe O'Donnell tried to do too much in too few pages. Maybe I was too excited to read this. Although I gave Steam Laundry only three stars, it almost got there for me, and I will absolutely read whatever O'Donnell puts out next. It's a good first work, and I bet her second will be even better.
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