It’s Thursday — What Book is Your State… Alaska!

The Columbia Spectator is doing a series, every Thursday, on “a list of 50 books that we think capture the essence of each state, all while telling a great story along the way.”  We have already learned that To Kill A Mockingbird best represents Alabama — and that the capitol is Montgomery.  Then we moved to Michigan and contemplated whether Eugenides’s Middlesex wouldn’t have been a better choice than The Virgin Suicides.  Last weekend I squeezed in North Dakota’s Peace Like A River by Leif Enger. 

This week…  Alaska!!

b-mully Its Thursday -- What Book is Your State... Alaska!
Photo by b-mully

The pick is… Nancy Lord’s short story collection The Man Who Swam With Beavers.

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Photo by creativity+

Since I have not (yet) read Lord’s work, I will let Melanie Jones from the Columbia Spectator explain her choice:

Nancy Lord’s short stories, collected in The Man Who Swam With Beavers, despite spanning years, locations, and all sorts of protagonists (both human and animal), are connected by their basis in Eskimo folktales and their evocation, both figurative and literal, of the Alaskan wilderness. At the heart of the conservation debate, and with a population divided between Native Americans, recent locals, and businessmen, Alaska is a state at war with its elements—and this unique quality is what Lord’s stories capture best. “Recall of the Wild” demonstrates the futility of attempting to domesticate or obliterate nature, while “What Was Washing” recounts the way in which oil companies send anthropologists “to study who and what was in the place before they went ahead and changed it.”

sara-heinrichs-awfulsara Its Thursday -- What Book is Your State... Alaska!
Photo by saraheinrichs(awfulsara)

Jones continues…

But Alaska is also largely uncharted and untamed, bitter and beautiful. In Lord’s stories the rich wildlife and fierce landscapes serve often to inspire, sometimes to horrify, and always to enmesh the protagonists in its powerful ebb. A retired city man is drawn into the life of a nearby dam in “The Man Who Swam With Beavers,” while “Afterlife” portrays a poacher haunted by his kills. In “The Man Who Went Through Everything,” Lord perhaps best captures why Alaska is so alluring—at once intimate and unattainable. Noah, an antique dealer, is perpetually adrift—and his only escape from life is in his one-man canoe. “He could feel the plastic rippling his back,” Lord writes. “He felt as though there were barely any barrier between the river and himself. He was of it, in it, maybe even it.” The water that flows through and around this land is at once beautiful and dangerous, freeing and overwhelming, much like the state itself.

aknding Its Thursday -- What Book is Your State... Alaska!
Photo by aknding

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