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Paperback The Island Within Book

ISBN: 067973239X

ISBN13: 9780679732396

The Island Within

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

Here is Nelson's luminously wise account of his exploration of an unnamed island in the Pacific Northwest. This book revises our own relationship with nature, allowing us to observe it and also to participate in it with reverence and a sense of wonder.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Richly evocative, beautifully written, moving, wonderful.

Richly evocative, beautifully written, moving, wonderful. "The Island" is an experience to read and well deserving of the prestigious John Burroughs Medal in 1991 for distinguished natural history writing. A cultural anthropologist by training, Nelson lived for extended periods in Athabaskan and Alaskan Eskimo villages, experiences which inspired his earliest works, including "Hunters of the Northern Ice," "Shadow of the Hunter," and "The Athabaskans." Nelson's 1983 book "Make Prayers to the Raven," about the Koyukon people of Alaska, was the basis for a public television series, for which he served as writer and associate producer Nelson weaves into "The Island" his recollections and experiences with the Koyukon Native Americans of Alaska. Although he never reveals the exact location of the island, Nelson's makes it abundantly clear there is both a physical and spiritual setting for this thoughtful and inspiring book. The depth of Nelson's prose requires several reading sessions. This is a must read for anyone interested in much needed perspectives of the natural world and the proper place and perspective of humankind. By Kyle Gardner, author of Medicine Rock Reflections

thoughtful natural history with a twist of personal reflection

This is a well-written, thoughtful account of the writer's personal encounters with part of southeast Alaska. The natural history descriptions are beautifully written without being trite. The personal reflections provide insight into the author's relationship with his own culture as well as others in which he has lived. If you enjoy natural history writing, this is the book for you.

A Passion for Place

Here is a book that you may have to digest in small bits. Nelson's prose is dense, descriptive and charged with an intensity that occasionally makes you wonder how he can stand to inhabit his own skin. His description of the day he spent deer hunting for example - the physical strain of stalking, questioning the "rightenss" of his mental and spiritual state, worrying about having enough meat to tide himself and his family over for the winter, trying to read the signs he perceives in the woods, remembering the teaching of the elders of the Indian tribe he studied with - is exhausting for the reader as well as Nelson. This doesn't mean it wasn't worth the work; just that you may need a break every so often to catch your breath.The Island Within is about a special relationship Nelson has built with an island in the Pacific Northwest. When he is not there, studying the animals, hunting with his dog and exploring on his own or with his family, he is wishing he was and planning his next visit. The reader is treated not only to graphic physical descriptions of the island and its inhabitants, but to Nelson's ongoing internal dialog with himself, in which he seeks to balance three very different ways of life - the loner, the family man and the student of Indian ways.Perhaps the greatest gift offered by this book is a fresh look at how a human being can relate to his world. As much as I came to appreciate the island, I also enjoyed Nelson's tales of his time spent away from it. His fishing trip with his son, the days he spends working in his garden picking berries, the long runs he takes with his dog, his playful attempt to sneak up on a family of seals and his description of the day he decided to open all his windows and let the winds of a large storm blow through his home are equally fun and revealing. Here is someone who has recognized that he is part and parcel of the physical world, and has dared to tear down preconceived notions in order to interact with it in new and playful ways.The one thing you should not expect from The Island Within is a clear cut plot and story line. This book is all about sharing at an elemental level.

A Treasure

This book is a treasure to be cherished, to be read and reread, to be pondered deeply. An easy facility with poetic language combined with insatiable curiousity and in depth knowledge of the natural world focuses on the kind of inter-relationship human creatures are called to have with "this fragile earth, our island home."

Mist and deer

Richard Nelson writes a lovely, haunting collection of essays, mostly set on an island off the coast of Southeast Alaska. Although this book fits into the category of literaure called nature writing, Nelson takes positions which may seem atypical in the environmentalist community, especially his support of hunting as a means of acquiring one's food. Nelson argues convincingly that people have the greatest sense of the land, the greatest sense of spiritual connection, when they subsist from the land on which they live. A cultural anthropologist who spent a great deal of time studying and living with the Koyukon people of interior Alaska, Nelson draws heavily upon these experiences as they inform his actions on "his" island. Mostly, though, the book is a chronicle of his days spent on the island, stalking deer, surfing off the western shore of the island, watching out for brown bears, and reflecting on the ambivalence many of us feel about sharing a special place with other people. Nelson's language seems to reflect the landscape itself, evoking a sense of the mist and drizzle of the island. A landmark book in nature writing.
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