

SPORTS & RECREATION
240 Pages, 5 x 8
Trade Paper, $16.95 (US $16.95) (CA $18.95)
Publication Date: June 2010
ISBN 9780982433287
Rights: US & CA
Schaffner Press (Jun 2010)
A harrowing trek through one of the world’s most dangerous occupations
Painting a visceral portrait of the life of commercial fishermen in the remote Eskimo village of Egekik, Alaska, this intense memoir depicts the author's four summers spent with a crew of seasonal salmon netters. Distinguishing itself from a typical adventure, this recollection relates the unforgiving supervision of the experienced female crew-chief, who along with her rugged shipmates lives by the credo: do the work or leave. From an encounter with an overly-inquisitive grizzly bear and being swamped by a mother-ship in open waters to the customary run-ins with colorful locals, this record is certain to appeal to adventurers, nature lovers, and armchair travelers alike. In the tradition of Jon Krakauer, Peter Matthiessen, and Sebastien Junger, this is an honest and vivid story of what it means to leave so-called civilization behind for a life full of danger, excitement, untold beauty, and physically grueling work.
"Go fall off the edge of the earth and you might just get to a place where life still throbs. Bill Carter fell and felt the blasts of the Bering Sea blow away our pious lies about ourselves and the thing we call nature. This vivid and engaging book sketches the way to get home before we kill all hope of home. And the fishing ain't bad either." —Charles Bowden, author, Down by the River: Drugs, Money, Murder and Family