The sun is a compass A 4,000-mile journey into the Alaskan wilds

Caroline Van Hemert

Book - 2019

Documents the biologist adventurer's treks in the vast wilderness region spanning the Pacific rainforest through the Alaskan Arctic, where she and her husband tested their physical boundaries while making profound natural-world connections.

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Subjects
Genres
Travel writing
Published
New York : Little, Brown Spark 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Caroline Van Hemert (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
vii, 308 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes index.
ISBN
9780316414425
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Wildlife biologist Van Hemert enters the ever-burgeoning list of books about women finding themselves while off the beaten path, including major best-sellers by Elizabeth Gilbert and Cheryl Strayed. But this is a bit different, a bracing adventure about a married couple in the Alaskan wilderness. Unhappy with her professional choices and unsure of the best career direction to take, Van Hemert and her husband decide to pursue their long-held dream of paddling and hiking across the Last Frontier. Unlike for many who write such books, the country is not unfamiliar to Van Helmert, who is from Anchorage, so they know to meticulously prepare their supplies and schedule food drops. But there are surprises (namely one surly bear) and some serious introspection and frustration as they consider more than once just what on earth they have committed to by embarking on such a massive trip. What they ultimately learn is that they really do love the outdoors and each other and Alaska's nature can't be beat. Book clubs will want to take note of this entertaining and inspiring chronicle.--Colleen Mondor Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In undertaking an epic trek from the Pacific Northwest to the Alaskan Arctic, Van Hemert, a wildlife biologist, and her husband encountered both the grandeur and danger of some of the planet's wildest locations. She vividly renders the experience, including being stalked by a black bear in the Brooks Range, initially visible only as "deep-set eyes, a pointed nose, and cinnamon-colored fur"; fighting the elements in a homemade rowboat off Vancouver Island; capsizing a raft in the Arctic Ocean; and coming under relentless attack for days by thousands of mosquitos in the Mackenzie Delta. Similarly, descriptions of witnessing a huge herd of caribou crossing Alaska's Noatak River and of being followed in the Arctic Ocean by two huge moose, "large, brown noses stirring the surface of the water as they stare blankly ahead," capture the magnificence of untamed nature. Van Hemert proves equally adept at exploring the inner dialogue that accompanied the harrowing physical feats, touching on love and loss, new parenthood, and the struggle to combine her passions for scientific inquiry and adventure. She leaves nature lovers with a story-of adventure, of environmental awareness, and of personal discovery-worth savoring. Agent: Bonnie Nadell, Hill Nadell Literary. (Mar.) c Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A research wildlife biologist at the U.S. Geological Survey Alaska Science Center recounts a stirring wilderness adventure set against the background of a young woman juggling family, career, and a passion for rough country.From the Pacific rainforests of Washington state to a remote corner of the Alaskan Arctic, it was an often grueling, 4,000-mile journey by foot, skis, raft, and canoe that few would have attempted, even such experienced wilderness travelers as debut author Van Hemert and her husband, Pat. In 2012, the author, who had begun to question her devotion to science, and Pat, a home builder driven by wanderlust, embarked on an expedition that would succeed or fail on human power aloneno roads, no trails, no motorsand test the limits of their endurance on some of the harshest and most unforgiving terrain in the world. Van Hemert chronicles their journey in sharp, sometimes-harrowing detail, though not so minutely that the narrative bogs down in the exigencies of living in the wild. While she discusses their various triumphs and travails, the author fully expresses the wonder of what they saw and experienced, who they met along the way, the microcultures they encountered, and how the journey brought her back to a love of scientific inquiry (if not to a love of the laboratory). After a brief in-progress report, she opens with the couple's personal histories and motivations for undertaking the trip. What might have been perfunctory actually adds depth. For all the readers' vicarious thrills and Van Hemert's admirable writing, it is the author's candor regarding her doubts and her appealing vulnerability that make this memoir so resonant.One follows this engrossing adventure feeling as eager as the travelers to see what's around the next bend in the river, on the next island, across the next coastal passage, or over the next mountain pass. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.