Two books from Tom Walker detail how Denali National Park was established and rose to prominence despite mixed sentiments.
The author of Walter Harper: Alaska Native Son chronicles the live of adventure that honed Harper’s skills and enabled him to summit Denali.
Cold Mountain Path, a new book from Tom Kizzia, tells a decades-long story about happenings in the abandoned mining town of McCarthy.
The book Saloons, Prostitutes, and Temperance in Alaska Territory explores what happened in the boomtown of Skagway after the gold rush.
What happens when a fly fisherman steps into a deep hole in the river? Find out in this excerpt from An Alaska Flyfisher’s Odyssey.
Fifty Miles from Tomorrow is the memoir of Willie Hensley, one of the central figures in the long push for Alaska Native Rights.
The 2021 book Valdez Rises, by Tabitha Gregory, details the monumental task of relocating the city after the 1964 earthquake.
A book review of Fortune’s Distant Shores, which tells the tale of the short-lived and often forgotten Kotzebue gold rush.
An excerpt from “Telling Raven Stories,” one of several essays in Sherry Simpson’s book The Way Winter Comes.
A Shape in the Dark is a gripping and authentic book that weaves outdoor adventure, natural history, and memoir.