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ISBN: PB: 9781602234437

University of Chicago Press, University of Alaska Press

March 2021

201 pp.

22.8x15.2 cm

PB:
£18,00
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Finding True North

First-Hand Stories of the Booms that Build Modern Alaska

Melting sea ice and simmering volcanoes. Sled dogs racing through unnamed valleys. These were the images that came to mind when Molly Rettig got a job at the local Fairbanks Daily News-Miner following journalism school. An environmentalist at heart, she craved the vast, untouched spaces that had long been paved over on the east coast. But when she got to Fairbanks, her seventy-two-year-old neighbor, Clutch, invited her on a tour of his gold mine – an eight-hundred-foot tunnel inside his house. Not exactly the wilderness she'd imagined. As she searched for the "Last Frontier", she met four sourdoughs who helped her find it. They led her on a wild journey from the gold rush days through the greatest oil boom North America has ever seen, revealing a place that was built on resources. As she pans for gold in an Arctic stream, swoops through valleys with a legendary bush pilot, and retraces the pipeline route with one of its builders, she realizes that even she wouldn't be there if it weren't for the roads and mines and oil fields that came first. But when Alaska's oil economy crashes, she faces the same question as every Alaskan: What is most important about this place, and what do we really need to live here?  

About the Author

Molly Rettig is communications director at the Cold Climate Housing Research Center. She moved to Fairbanks to work as a reporter for the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner in 2010 and covered government, science, and education.