Degrees of separation A decade north of 60

Alison McCreesh

Book - 2024

"At age 21, Alison hitchhiked to the Yukon and spent the summer living in a tent.10 years later, in the deep of winter and seven months pregnant, she returns. Degrees of Separation is about what happened in between.Over the course of a decade, artist Alison McCreesh lived, worked, and travelled north of the 60th parallel. Through a combination of autobiographical stories, drawings and sketches, Degrees of Separation offers an intimate and understated glimpse of the North as Alison experienced it. From frigid days spent killing time while stranded in the High Arctic, to the challenges of raising a baby in a small shack with no running water, it is one young woman's personal experience of both passing through and of setting down roo...ts.Tinged with McCreesh's characteristic blend of humour and humanity, Degrees of Separation is about the north and its vastness and its diversity. While the backdrop may seem foreign to many, this collection is also a universal exploration of those transformative years from young-adulthood to motherhood. It's a graphic novel navigating themes of connection and disconnect, between the north and the south, but also between different norths and between our different selves." --

Saved in:

2nd Floor New Shelf Show me where

BIOGRAPHY/McCreesh, Alison
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf BIOGRAPHY/McCreesh, Alison (NEW SHELF) Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Comics (Graphic works)
Graphic novels
Autobiographical comics
Published
Wolfville, NS : Conundrum Press [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Alison McCreesh (author)
Physical Description
379 pages : chiefly illustrations ; 26 cm
ISBN
9781772620931
  • Before you begin
  • Prologue
  • Part 1
  • Part 2
  • Epilogue
  • Notes.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Set in Canada's sparsely populated north, these pleasantly meandering vignettes from McCreesh (Norths) document 10 years committed to adventure and freedom, before taking a turn for the elegiac. In 2008, when she's in her early 20s, McCreesh heads from Quebec to Dawson City, a small Gold Rush town in the Yukon. For the next decade, first with friends, later with her partner Pat, and eventually with their two young children, she lives a semi-nomadic artist's life in campers, houseboats, and shacks, earning money as a translator and an art teacher. Refreshingly, she offers no definitive explanation for her wanderlust; instead, the narrative bears gentle, slow-paced witness to her rural, off-the-grid lifestyle, including observations of local Inuit communities, both historical and contemporary. As McCreesh reckons with the demands of adult life, she reflects on the gentrification of a beloved old shanty town, and the devastating effects of climate change on Indigenous life, delicate ecosystems, and local infrastructure. "All is connected... all is changing," she observes. The panels are densely populated with loose-lined, casual sketches of figures, and interspersed with realistic and detailed illustrations of the northern lights and various artifacts of rural life. It's poignant ode to the vastness, and interconnectedness, of the North and the people who make their homes there. (Apr.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved