"In August 1918 Rockwell Kent and his 9-year-old son settled into a primitive cabin on an island near Seward, Alaska. Kent, who during the next three decades became America's premier graphic artist, printmaker, and illustrator, was seeking time, peace, and solitude to work on his art and strengthen his ties with his son. This reissue of the journal chronicling their 7-month odyssey describes what Kent called "an adventure of the spirit." He soon discovers how deeply he is "stirred by simple happenings in a quiet world" as man and boy face both the mundane and the magnificent: satisfaction in simple chores like woodchopping or baking; the appalling gloom of long and lonely winter nights; hours of silence while each works at his drawings; crystalline moonlight glancing off a frozen lake; killer whales cavorting in their bay. Richly illustrated by Kent's drawings, the journal vividly re-creates that sense of great height and space - both external and internal - at the same time that it celebrates a wilderness now nearly lost to us."--BOOK JACKET.
WildernessRockwell Kent
The cure for anything is salt waterMary South
The cure for anything is salt waterThe RoadJack London
The RoadEmbajada a TamorlánRuy González de Clavijo
Embajada a TamorlánThe Hare With Amber Eyes A Hidden InheritanceMichael Maloney
The Hare With Amber Eyes A Hidden InheritanceTravels with CharleyJohn Steinbeck
Travels with CharleyByronHarold Nicolson
ByronThe works of Hubert Howe BancroftHubert Howe Bancroft
The works of Hubert Howe BancroftSatori in ParisJack Kerouac
Satori in ParisThe Last Voyage of ColumbusMartin Dugard
The Last Voyage of ColumbusLorenzo in TaosMabel Dodge Luhan
Lorenzo in TaosOn a Chinese screenWilliam Somerset Maugham
On a Chinese screenMy Attainment of the PoleFrederick Albert Cook
My Attainment of the Pole