A journey to Alaska's remote roadless villages, during a time of great historical transition, brings us this enduring portrait of a place and its people. Alutiiq, Yup'ik, Inupiaq, and Athabascan subjects reveal themselves as entirely contemporary individuals with deep longings and connection to the land and to their past. Tom Kizzia's account of his travels off the Alaska road system, first published in 1991, has endured with a sterling reputation for its thoughtful, poetic, unflinching engagement with the complexity of Alaska's rural communities. Wake of the Unseen Object is now considered some of the finest nonfiction writing about Alaska. This new edition includes an updated introduction by the author, looking at what remains the same after thirty years and what is different-both in Alaska, and in the expectations placed on a reporter visiting from another world.
Title: The Wake of the Unseen Object – Travels through Alaska`s Native Landscapes (Classic Reprint Series)
Author: Kizzia, Tom
ISBN: 9781602234307
Binding:
Publisher: University of Alaska Press
Publication Date: 2020-12-15
Number of Pages: 336
Weight: 0.5082 kg
This is a deliciously friendly, intimate, savvy, unpretentious book by an Alaskan who knows his territory as writers from Outside who fly in and out for a quick tour do not. Its facts, its tales, its personality make it a delight. - Edward Hoagland
Kizzia writes with a quiet compassion that brings the people and their hard land
clearly into focus. - Boston Globe
A charming, informative book . . . Kizzia writes a clear, unobtrusive prose that
crystallizes in memorable images. - The Washington Post
Kizzia, whose writing has an elegant ease, has fashioned a spell-binding book in
which he has captured much of the endearing, the funny, the revealing, the wise. -
Daily Sitka Sentinel
Kizzia is a thoughtful and lyrical writer who manages to be sensitive without veering into sentimentality. - Philadelphia Inquirer
A forgotten classic-not only one of the top books about Alaska Native culture, but one of the best Alaska books ever...Every bit as fresh and relevant today as it was a quarter century ago. -- Nick Jans, author of A Wolf Called Romeo