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Paperback Shopping for Porcupine: A Life in Arctic Alaska Book

ISBN: 1571313117

ISBN13: 9781571313119

Shopping for Porcupine: A Life in Arctic Alaska

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Growing up in the Arctic, pragmatic, simple questions had useful answers. And frostbite was a way of life. In Shopping for Porcupine, Seth Kantner returns to the setting of his debut novel, Ordinary Wolves, with a fascinating account of life on North America's last frontier.

In these essays and photographs, Kantner chronicles the "by-hand times so recently passed," watching through the lens of his life the transformation...

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

Well done, with photos

Excellent view of life in Alaska, frontier Alaska, beginning in the 1960's. Igloo-mud hit living featured with many many color photos taken by the family over the years. Well written, well described, well lived

Shopping for Porcupine

I loved this book! I enjoyed Ordinary Wolves, so I waited very anxiously for Mr. Kantner's next book. It was well worth the wait! The first thing I did was go through all of the pictures in the book. So THIS was the Alaska Mr, Kantner writes about! Far from the tour buses and sight seeing trains. The pictures themselves told a wonderful story! The written stories were perfect - done in a way that not only entertained me, but made me feel the Alaska Mr. Kantner describes. I felt the cold, I heard the wind and could feel the hide of a bear. I laughed, I cried, I cringed, and at times even envied experiences of a life spent in Alaska's Wilderness. The Alaska Mr. Kantner writes about is a world fast slipping away - native ways, unmarred land, plentiful animals. I am so grateful that he wrote about a lifestyle - a world - that I would never have had the chance to experience, had it not been for this book. I plan to buy more copies for gifts and would recommend this book to anyone!

The Real Deal

Seth Kantner's book, Shopping For Porcupine, is a viscerally real collection of portraits and recollections of life on northwestern Alaska's Kobuk River, from the late 1950's through to the present day. Kantner's folks were 'outsiders' when they settled on the Kobuk, to be followed by many more. Most have moved on, but Seth - who was born in his family's sod iglu - has remained for over 40 years. His dad's connection to the land, the Inuit culture and unfettered subsistance lifestyle rubbed off on Seth, and he has carried on those traditions while coping with the inescapable intrusions of modern Western life. I especially appreciated the honest and literally wrenching descriptions of the changes in the land, the people, the culture and the climate, that over time serve to remind us of the impermanence of anything in this world. Yet Kantner shows us that not all change is beyond our power to control or at least influence -- although simply living by example is not always enough, and speaking up can be a little like banging a pot to scare a bear away: now he knows where you are. I have a snapshot in my mind of the upper Kobuk during the years I lived there - many of the same people and the same lifestyle that Seth describes here so accurately. Coupled with the stories and lore from before my time, that's how I see the place and that's how I wish, in a perfect world, it could remain. The changes I hear and read about are confounding and upsetting even to me, who spent a relatively short time there. The more so for Seth Kantner, whose whole life is invested in the place. Clearly the conundrum is to decide what change to accept gracefully and what to challenge, vocally and adamantly. Wilderness living is not for everyone, and can be almost unfathomable if you haven't done it. Hudson Stuck once said, of wilderness travel by dog team, that the greatest gift one man could give another was a trail. With his writing, Seth Kanter breaks trail through the heart of the last half-century of life in northwestern Alaska as only someone who lives the life could do. Those who find it and follow will be infinitely richer for the journey.

Great non-fiction

When I saw that Kantner had a second book, I was skeptical. It seemed to come too hard on the paws of "Ordinary Wolves." I felt there'd be no way it was as good as "Ordinary Wolves", his first book and an instant Alaskan classic, that "Porcupine" would be just cashing in on the critical acclaim of "Wolves". How wrong I was. The non-fiction account of "Porcupine" gives Kantner both more and less latitude with characters and stories than "Wolves". In "Porcupine" he provides us the true backstory to the amazing story-line in "Wolves", in many ways both more satisfying and more interesting than his fiction. Here we can read the real-life version of living in a sod igloo as a youngster, the real people that inspired the cast of characters in "Wolves, real landscapes and interactions with them. After reading "Shopping for Porcupine" I had to re-read "Ordinary Wolves" and found it even better the second time. The photos are stunning, but I like the writing more as Kanner's words convey non-visual emotions that photos miss. I look forward to his next book, whatever it might be, as his bush upbringing offers us all a simultaneously fresh but surprisingly shared perspective on all things. "Shopping for Porcupine" is well worth $30, if for no other reason than it will prompt this wonderfully gifted artist to write still more.

Shopping for Porcupine

Shopping for Porcupine is a beautiful, thought-provoking book that defies genre. It is more than an autobiography of Seth Kantner, who was born and reared in a tiny, mouse-infested sod igloo on a bluff above the Kobuk River in arctic Alaska. It is also a collection of essays and articles Kanter has published elsewhere. The result is a wonderful story of a boy growing into a man in one of the remotest places on earth, but it is also a glimpse into the lives and society of old-time Alaskans, both native and white, and how the 21st Century is warping the old ways. The book is a passionate statement about an environment in flux and in peril. It is also a love letter to an impossibly beautiful, brutal and unforgiving land. Kantner's splendid photographs add greatly to his colorful and sensitive stories about pioneers, trappers, hunters, and the creatures he encounters in the far north. The striking images and Kantner's own gentle humor and insight seem to soften the often hard realities he writes about. After reading Kantner's excellent novel, Ordinary Wolves, and this non-fiction work, Shopping for Porcupine, it became apparent that to call one fiction and the other real is plain silly. Kantner tells the truth in both. Sometimes his truth is hard to take, as when he describes "hunters" who fly onto the remote tundra to slaughter wolves from speeding snowmobiles. Sometimes it is honest and endearing as when Kantner flies with his wife and daughter to a gala event in New York City to receive a prestigious literary award and the best he has to wear are clean jeans and a Banana Republic T-shirt. Kantner is modest about his own skills and toughness. He is more giving, more complimentary to others. The result is that Seth Kantner is a man you want to know better. A good beginning is to read his books, visit his website. You'll be glad you did. --Dave Gilbert

Shopping for Porcupine

Seth Kantner's second book, "Shopping for Porcupine: A Life in Alaska," is part autobiography, part historical narrative, part environmental treatise. His successful blend of all three creates a wonderful sense of place, a wilderness adventure and above all, an understanding of the land that is Alaska above the Arctic Circle. Born in 1965, Kantner's 43 years on this earth, most of it lived in Alaska's north country, chronicles a pace of change--technological change, environmental change and cultural change--at a dizzying speed. The changes over his 43 years eclipse the changes of centuries. The proliferation of "Snow-Gos"(snowmobiles), replacing dog-teams, dog-sleds and mushers, the arrival of satellite television, the move to a cash-based economy from subsistence hunting, gathering and fishing--these changes have occurred in Alaska's north country since the 1960's. In Seth Kantner's life, he lives the transition from the old ways of hunting and fishing, of dog-power and of a quiet life in the bush. He interprets this for readers in a style so gentle, so subtle that it kind of creeps up on you before you realize how radical and rapid these changes are. "Shopping for Porcupine" includes a generous helping of utterly fantastic photographs of Alaska's north county. It is also a tribute the the traditional Inupiaq subsistence culture and way of life that with the passing of the elders--all of whom in 2008 are about 60 years and older-- will exist no more. In 2001, I flew to Kotzebue, which is North America's largest village above the Arctic Circle. Kotzebue is the jumping-off point for wildnerness trips into the northwest quadrant of Alaska. Kantner's descriptions of life in Kotzebue and in surrounding native villages is right on the money. After taking a bush flight out into the Noatak Preserve, I spent two weeks backpacking, hiking up mountains, wading across fast-flowing streams and hopping tussocks through wet tundra. For me, reading, "Shopping for Porcupine" was like re-doing my bush trek from my kitchen table chair. "Shopping for Porcupine" is carefully written in a concise and parsimonious style. Every word counts. If Alaska Senator Ted Stevens would read this book, I would like to think he would have a much better understanding of Alaska's north country and greater respect for the land. He might learn something about the caribou migration. It might even change his mind on oil drilling in ANWR.
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