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Coming Into the Country Paperback | Pages: 448 pages
Rating: 4.22 | 6059 Users | 292 Reviews

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Title:Coming Into the Country
Author:John McPhee
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 448 pages
Published:April 1st 1991 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux (first published 1977)
Categories:Nonfiction. Travel. Environment. Nature. History. Science

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Alaska, the early 1960s. Darkness covered the land. The latest winter storm, which by then had already lasted half a century, still showed no sign of ending. The cold and the snow were beginning to wear the proud Alaskans down. Then Russia invaded. Again. The fledgling state was unprepared for war, and so the Alaskan Militia fell back before the forces of the Dark Lord Stalin, and the Red Army of Moscow reached the walls of Juneau. For two days and nights the city was bombarded by communist orcs. On February 11, 1964, the third day of the seige, a light appeared on the horizon. It was the sun! After fifty years of endless night, dawn finally broke over Alaska! Rousing the defenders, the mighty wizard Ted Stevens the White led the final charge and drove the Red Army into the sea. Alaska won the day. Ten years passed. In the early 70s, the Prophet McPhee came to Alaska. He had had visions since the Great Dawn, terrible, awe-inspiring visions of a woman in red riding a war-grizzly. The priests he spoke to all agreed: it was the Mother of Grizzlies, Daughter of Alaska, the great Messiah-Queen of the prophecies who would restore the mighty Alaskan Empire to glory and lead Her armies out of the North to conquer the Lower 48. The Return of the Sun had marked the hour of Her birth, but none had seen sign of Her since. And so the Prophet McPhee vowed to find Her. Assembling a party of shamen, slaves (bearing gifts of gold, jewels, and newspapers), and mages from the Bureau of Outdoor Recreation, the Department of Fish and Game, and other government agencies, McPhee set out into the widerness. Questions arose: was the Mother of Grizzlies also Daughter of Grizzlies, or was She merely a feral child, raised and educated in the ways of the bear? Would they find Her feasting on fish and berries, or did She hibernate in the caves of bears, sleeping until Alaska needed a savior? Russia had been silent for many years, but would surely invade again. The expedition failed; most of the party was eaten by wolves or lost in skirmishes with the National Park Service, so they returned to Juneau. It was clear that, wherever the Queen of Alaska was, She would not reveal Herself until the time was right. So Alaska waited, and prepared. And the question was asked: where would Her Capital be? Juneau was not grand enough, and Anchorage and Fairbanks still lay in ruins from the war, so the Prophet McPhee again set out into the wilderness, again with his shamen and slaves and government bureaucrats, to find a suitable place to build Her Palace. And again the shamen were eaten by wolves, and the bureaucrats bickered, and the slaves revolted, so McPhee went back to Juneau. The quest seemed hopeless. McPhee had not found the Chosen One or built Her City, and all his shamen were dead. But, inspired by rumors of a secret messiah breeding program, he set off alone, on a third expedition, following the elusive trail of a powerful sisterhood of sorceress-nuns. Here the narrative grows sketchy, as McPhee’s accounts of interviews of dozens of gold miners, hermits, holy men, ice-mages, and the occasional talking bear led him in dizzying circles, endlessly searching for a treasure that chose to remain secret. McPhee apparently never found the Mother of Grizzlies, and left Alaska in disgrace. There are rumors, however, that he drank himself to death, only to be resurrected by an unidentified hirsute girl, but those stories remain unverified. Even McPhee’s account must be questioned. Were his visions true? Did he truly foresee the birth and rise of Alaska’s savior? If so, She remains hidden, and perhaps none will know the hour of Her coming. Where is the bear and the rider? Where is the voice that is grating? IA! IA! SARAH PALIN FHTAGN!

List Books To Coming Into the Country

Original Title: Coming into the Country
ISBN: 0374522871 (ISBN13: 9780374522872)
Edition Language: English
Setting: Alaska(United States)
Literary Awards: National Book Critics Circle Award Nominee for General Nonfiction (1977)

Rating Out Of Books Coming Into the Country
Ratings: 4.22 From 6059 Users | 292 Reviews

Critique Out Of Books Coming Into the Country
If anyone could figure out how to steal Italy, Alaska would be the place to hid it." What a vivid way to describe Alaska's immensity. 'There has been a host of excellent books on Alaska. My favorite until recently was Joe McGinnis's Going to Extremes but John McPhee's Coming Into the Country is wonderful, too. McPhee's book is divided into three parts: first an exploration of wilderness described during the course of a canoe/kayak trip down the Salmon River. Much in the manner of the river, his

McPhees talent for writing about the natural world is only surpassed by his eye for people, who are the beating heart of his work. In Coming Into The Country, the characters who inhabit the vast northern reaches of the United States practically seem to jump off the page, generously rendered in all their imperfect glory. The warmth of these presentations contrasts richly with the frigid setting, and forms the heart and soul of the book.

Things I learned about Alaska:-- Merrill Field, a light-plane airfield in Anchorage, handles fifty-four thousand more flights per year than Newark International. This is so because bushplane trips are more common than taxis or driving, the roads being what they are.-- Fried cranberries will help a sore throat.-- That somethings are better left unchanged or not re-named:"What would you call that mountain, Willie?""Denali. I'll go along with the Indians that far."Everyone aboard was white but

The best book Ive read this year.

I was really hoping this would be about geology, along the lines of Basin and Range. It wasn't. It's divided into three sections; in the first, McPhee wanders around unpopulated Alaska with several other men in several canoes/kayaks. I think one was from the Sierra Club, one from the Bureau of Land Management, etc. They fished to supplement their food supplies, and camped along the rivers and streams. The second section was about the attempt to get Alaska's capital moved from Juneau. I now know

"'The proposals, up here, are for the future,' Kauffmann says, and he adds, after a moment, 'As Yellowstone was. Throughout the history of this country, it's been possible to go to a place where no one has camped before, and now that kind of opportunity is running out. We must protect it, even if artificially. The day will come when people will want to visit such a wildernesssaving everything they have in order to see it, at whatever cost. We're talking fifty and more years hence, when there may

Another wonderful book by McPhee. Introducing the reader to a side of Alaska that I doubt many people think about, at least I did not. There is more going on there than snow and salmon fishing. And yes, Sarah Palin was governor, but don't let that dissuade you from plunging in. I think it takes a while to get used to McPhee's style and this book tends to roam, but by the end it is all tied together quite nicely. The characters are as unique as the geography and geology, many of them are beyond

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