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Fairbanks author David Marusek covers familiar themes with familiar characters, but brings readers to a different conclusion this time.
Carlstrom, who lived near Fairbanks for nearly two decades, completed the book in part as a gift for her grandchildren.
This wonderful children’s book invites readers of all ages and from every corner of the planet into the heart of a culture that arose in isolation from nearly all of the rest of the world.
An anthropologist by training, an outdoors guide by profession, and a writer by nature and compulsion, Engelhard has wandered across the varied landscapes of Alaska for decades.
The book’s four sections focus on the topics of history and biography; language; folklore and folklife; and rituals and festivals.
Authors Against Book Bans has joined the growing pushback by parents, educators, librarians and groups seeking to prevent what members feel is a dangerous drift toward reducing the number and diversity of books on library shelves.
Clara and Grafton “Hap” Burke became deeply integrated into the community, and caused changes with rippling effects over time.
Abominable is too kind of a word for this rhetoric.
Author Mike Coppock reviews some more popular destinations but also covers communities like Pelican and Yakutat that are unfamiliar to most.
The middle book in a series of three set in the era of the Russian American Company is rich with details from Russian and Native populations from the time.
After penning a memoir and a novel, the author who was born in Sitka and grew up in Anchorage is planning a collection of stories from her childhood.
The book is drawn from the history, creation and uses of parkas, and who provided personal memories and legends that enhance our understanding of their roles in an ancient culture.
Lee Morgan, a veterinarian from Washington, D.C., writes about his introduction to the race and tells tales from along the roughly thousand-mile-long trail.
History offers us a clear example. Whether Americans choose to heed it remains to be seen.
Soldotna sixth-grade teacher Lawrence H. Khlinovski Rockhill established a student exchange that changed the arc of his life, and established longstanding ties between the two regions.