Aside from absolutely listening to plenty of Gordon Lightfoot while driving along the shores of Lake Superior; rather than music on the radio, I'll be listening to Audio Books along my journey. I've timed these books to line up their themes with the physical and cultural geography I'll be experiencing at any point in the drive. For those interested here are the books I've downloaded:
1. To Build a Fire by Jack London. This short story about an ill thought journey through the north lands will take me from my driveway to about Sutton, Alaska on the banks of the Matanuska River.
2. The Snow Child by Eowyn Ivey. A local writer from Palmer, Alaska, Eowyn's first novel is about a childless couple homesteading in the Matanuska Valley and the child they find in the woods. This should get me through to Whitehorse, Yukon.
3. White Fang by Jack London. The story of a wild wolf-dog in the Klondike becoming acclimated to man and traveling southward in a reverse to Buck's experience in The Call of the Wild.
4. The Tiger: A True Story of Vengeance and Survival by John Vaillant. An accounting of an injured Amur Tiger turning to man-killing in 1990's Russia. An appropriate tale as I travel the lonely Taiga of British Columbia.
5. Out of Africa by Isek Dinesen. As I approach the "Safari" lands of North America I think this will be a good choice. When I was seriously considering leaving Alaska after 17 years in 2022, I'd often post pictures of my home and life here with the caption "I had a farm in Africa" reflecting that no matter how much time I'd spent here...it still seemed transitory and already almost as if only a memory.
6. Son of the Morning Star: Custer and the Little Bighorn by Evan S. Connell. Can't think of a better read as a travel across the plains of Wyoming, Montana, and the Dakotas.
7. My Antonia by Willa Cather. This will bring me through the eastern end of South Dakota, Iowa, and Nebraska (maybe Kansas too).
8. The Water is Wide by Pat Conroy. By this point I'm headed south east directly for the Carolina Lowcountry and I'm driving listening to the poetry of Pat Conroy...here as he recounts his experience as a young teacher on Yamacraw Island.
9. The Great Santini by Pat Conroy. Another classic of Lowcountry and Military literature as Mr. Conroy records a year in the life of a military family ruled over by a Marine fighter pilot stationed in South Carolina.
10. Cold Mountain by Charles Frazier. An American Odyssey. A soldier leaves the siege lines of Petersburg, Virginia and makes his way back home to Appalachian North Carolina. As I'm leaving Wilmington and headed for the hills this story should get me to Pennsylvania.
11. The White Rhino Hotel by Bartle Bull. A story of an eclectic crowd of adventurers, pirates, settlers and natives in post-Great War Kenya. Set in the height (for better or worse) of east Africa's colonial past. A perfect tale as I travel from the Carnegie Museum of Natural History through the great zoo's of Ohio and Michigan.
12. Journey by James Michener. Rather than arrive by sea at Skagway, Alaska and crossing the Chilkoot Pass to the goldfields of the Yukon, four Englishmen and their Irish servant instead chose an overland route through western Canada.
13. American Buffalo: In Search of a Lost Icon by Steve Rinella. Across the Prairies of Canada, I'll listen to the account of a Bison hunt in the Copper River Valley of south-central Alaska, with anecdotes regarding the species's natural history.
14. The Call of the Wild by Jack London. A southland dog adapts to life in the north. I'm pushing hard into the Klondike at this point.
15. The Collected Best of Robert Service. Witty rhymes of adventures in the Klondike. If I'm able to fit in a journey to Dawson, I'll visit the cabins of Jack London and Robert Service.
16. To the Bright Edge of the World by Eowyn Ivey. The story of a military expedition to map south central Alaska in the late 19th Century.
17. Coming into the Country by John McPhee. A multi-chapter essay on what Alaska was 40 years ago and what it was becoming. An interesting look into the past's future.
I know this is ZooChat and not a Book Club...but I'd welcome any comments.