cover image Paddlenorth: Adventure, Resilience, and Renewal in the Arctic Wild

Paddlenorth: Adventure, Resilience, and Renewal in the Arctic Wild

Jennifer Kingsley. Greystone Books, (PGW, U.S. dist.; HarperCollins Canada, Canadian dist.), $26.95 (240p) ISBN 978-1-77164-035-0

Kingsley's debut book is an odd mix of how-to and travel writing set in Canada's north. The story follows Kingsley and her paddle mates%E2%80%94Tim, Levi, Jen, Drew and Alie%E2%80%94as they spend two months of the summer of 2005 canoeing through the heart of Nunavut up the Baillie and Back rivers to the Arctic Ocean. Interspersing her own mostly charmed Arctic journey with stories of the harrowing and deathly journeys of those who have gone before, the book places itself firmly in the tradition of European exploration of Canada's Arctic. This book adds nothing new to that conversation, and yet Kingsley disparages the other tradition from which she draws: "the wilderness as a backdrop for so-and-so's personal struggle," as she puts it. She paints herself as an irrational, selfish, stubborn, resentful, and impatient person. The moment of personal growth seems to come at the end of the trip when her canoe-mate delineates all of the things that kept Kingsley from feeling like part of the group. Kingsley listens, but the narrative ends shortly after with any growth during this "true encounter" with the wilderness remaining unclear. (Oct.) Agent: Martha Magor Webb, Anne McDermid & Associates.