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Still Points North: One Alaskan Childhood, One Grown-up World, One Long Journey Home

par Leigh Newman

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A memoir from the travel writer and editor who spent her childhood moving between her "Great Alaskan" father on the tundra in the summer and her more urbane mother in Baltimore during the school year, a lifestyle that led to an adult who both feared and idolized human connection.
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3 sur 3
Four plus stars for this wonderful book not because I grew up in Alaska (although I did) or because it was well written (although it was) but because it's wise, a coming-of-age saga nested like Russian dolls, each revealing another epiphany. Newman has a book of short stories coming out in April 22 (I believe) - Nobody Gets Out Alive - that seems to be on everyone's TBR. Here's hoping she gets the recognition that she deserves. ( )
  Lemeritus | Jan 14, 2022 |
between 2 and 3 stars. rambles
  deldevries | Jan 31, 2016 |
When Leigh's parents’ divorce, she is torn between two worlds, Baltimore and Alaska. Summers are spent in the wilderness of Alaska, fishing and hiking. The school year is spent in Baltimore, where she struggles to fit in with her peers.

I was very interested in the book when the author was talking about her childhood and her wildly different experiences. The author jumped around a lot in time, which I found extremely distracting. Sadly, I grew bored when she began talking about her adult life. The book quickly devolved into a therapy exercise rather than a readable story. I think this book had a lot of potential, but fell short. ( )
  JanaRose1 | Mar 25, 2013 |
3 sur 3
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Dear, my compass/
still points north/
to wooden houses/
and blue eyes/
fairy-tales where/
flaxen-headed/
younger songs/
bring home the goose.../
-Elizabeth Bishop, Untitled
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To my family
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In the largest state in the Union, a state built on gold rushes and oil pipelines, ninety-pound king salmon and twenty-pound king crabs, a lot of things come prefaced by the phrase Great Alaskan. -Chapter 1, The Great Alaskan
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I sit in the mud by a broken patio chair. My job is to listen and worship and not, under any circumstances, be noticed. I can do this until the end of time.
I did not bring up all the times we’d driven in the snow at home. And she did not take her foot off the gas, zigzagging over the southern areas of the country—that vast anti-Alaska of waffle houses and sunshine, cattle ranches and swamplands.
On the weekends she read thick James Michener paperbacks while Dad and I fished, and then, on the weekdays, she picked me up from school and—over and over—more times than anybody thought was possible, drove our car into the ditch on the way back home, missing the driveway to our house, as if she did not know where we lived at all.
I usually found some kind of left-loose, open-minded dog wandering around to play with. But that’s the thing about Baltimore: Nothing wanders. Even the squirrels hustle by as if they have a piano lesson to get to.
Being alone in the dark feels so much lonelier once somebody’s already been curled up with you.
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A memoir from the travel writer and editor who spent her childhood moving between her "Great Alaskan" father on the tundra in the summer and her more urbane mother in Baltimore during the school year, a lifestyle that led to an adult who both feared and idolized human connection.

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