Arctic solitaire A boat, a bay, and the quest for the perfect bear

Paul Souders

Book - 2018

"Professional photographer and amateur adventurer Paul Souders takes his C-Dory and his cameras to Hudson Bay to find and photograph polar bears over the course of three summers. He interacts with the people, animals, and history that he encounters and experiences life-threatening conditions on his solo expeditions."--Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Published
Seattle, WA : Mountaineers Books [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Paul Souders (author)
Physical Description
301 pages : color illustrations, color maps ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781680511048
  • Hudson Bay Map
  • Repulse Bay and Approaches
  • Author's Note
  • Chapter 1. The Ice Bear
  • Chapter 2. Beginnings
  • Chapter 3. Zones of Conflict
  • Chapter 4. Transitions
  • Chapter 5. A Hole in the Water
  • Chapter 6. Directions North
  • Chapter 7. The River and the Bay
  • Chapter 8. Big Water
  • Chapter 9. The Empty Coast
  • Chapter 10. Pit Stop
  • Chapter 11. Repulse Bay
  • Chapter 12. Ice
  • Chapter 13. Pay Dirt
  • Chapter 14. The New Year
  • Chapter 15. The Ice Kingdom
  • Chapter 14. The Half Shackleton
  • Chapter 17. A Sinking Feeling
  • Chapter 18. Round Two
  • Chapter 19. Chasing Lights
  • Chapter 20. Foreboding
  • Chapter 21. Into the Water
  • Chapter 22. Away We Go
  • Chapter 23. Prisoner of the Wind
  • Chapter 24. Latitude 65
  • Chapter 25. Unwelcome
  • Chapter 26. The Gift
  • Chapter 27. Cape Fear
  • Chapter 28. Unwinding
  • Chapter 29. Loose Ends
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Library Journal Review

Award-winning photographer Souders spent four summers traveling Hudson Bay's Westernmost reaches searching for polar bears to photograph. Judging by the pictures that accompany this work, he succeeded. Souders used his journals and notes to recount his trials and tribulations aboard C-Sick, his 22' fishing boat, with self-effacing humor and wit. The author often found himself at the mercy of the Bay's wind, tides and weather, searching for a safe harbor in an unforgiving landscape. When he was able to spot a well-camouflaged polar bear, he would anchor the boat, throw equipment and gear into a smaller and more maneuverable Zodiac, and drift closer to where the light and setting coalesced. Only once did a bear puncture one of the Zodiac's air tubes, making for a hasty retreat. Souders also describes his visits to isolated Inuit communities and the people who helped him along the way. VERDICT Souders writes with such intelligence and authenticity, amateur and would-be adventurers will be charmed by his travels.-Margaret Atwater-Singer, Univ. of Evansville Lib., IN © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Souders offers a debut account of his photographic travails in Canada's Hudson Bay area.The author, a Seattle-based photographer who's done work for National Geographic and Life, tells of when he went in search of polar bears in the remote reaches of northeastern Canada. This book, based on his notes from four boat trips between 2012 and 2015, offers a pleasurable excursion into the arctic wilds, interspersed with excellent, colorful images that give a good sense of the landscape, such as one of melting sea ice and a distant forest fire. Before embarking on an account of his journeys, however, Souders describes his own background, including his youth in rural Pennsylvania, his time in journalism school at the University of Maryland,and his experiences as a photojournalist in Haiti and South Africa. After Souders decided that he wanted to pursue nature photography, he studied "the masters of my crafteveryone from Ansel Adams to Art Wolfe, Galen Rowell, and Frans Lantingand I did everything I could to make my photographs look like theirs." In Seattle, he purchased a C-Dory boatnicknamed "C-Sick"for his excursions throughout the Hudson Bay. The rest of the book relates in sumptuous detail how he searched for sea ice and polar bears from Marble Island to Wager Bay and Melville Peninsula. While exploring the Nunavut and Manitoba Territories, he chatted with Inuit hunters and fishermen, made satellite calls to his wife back home, sipped bourbon alone on his boat, and, of course, took photos. Souders writes with a journalist's eye for detail: "I glassed all the different shapes and contours of the melting sea ice looking for any sign of polar bears." It's also a pleasure to read his descriptions of the landscape, animals ("Mom and cute cubs on a summer stroll across the rocky tundra. I watched her progress through the long lens, the steady click, click, click of the shutter matching her steps until she filled the frame"), and locals he met along the way.Adventurous memories of a talented photojournalist that abound with wonderful surprises. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.