Seth Kantner

Seth Kantner

Born and raised in the wilderness of northern Alaska, Seth Kantner is the author of numerous books, including Ordinary Wolves and Shopping for Porcupine: A Life in Arctic Alaska. His writing and photographs have appeared in the New York Times, Outside, Orion, and Reader’s Digest, and he is recipient of the Milkweed National Fiction Prize, the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Award, and a Whiting Award. Kantner has worked as a trapper, fisherman, gardener, mechanic, wildlife photographer, and adjunct professor. He lives with his wife and daughter in northwest Alaska, and is a columnist for the Alaska Dispatch News.

Awards
Milkweed National Fiction Prize
Whiting Award
Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Award
<em>Booklist</em> Top Ten Debut Novel of 2004
Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers selection

Books by Seth Kantner

Fiction
A Novel
By
Seth Kantner
A Publishers Weekly Best Book of 2004

Born and raised in the Arctic, Cutuk Hawcley has learned to provide for himself by hunting, fishing, and trading. But when he leaves for the city as a young man, incompatible realities collide, forcing Cutuk to choose between two worlds—both seemingly bent on rejecting him.

Fiction
A Novel
By
Seth Kantner
A Publishers Weekly Best Book of 2004

Born and raised in the Arctic, Cutuk Hawcley has learned to provide for himself by hunting, fishing, and trading. But when he leaves for the city as a young man, incompatible realities collide, forcing Cutuk to choose between two worlds—both seemingly bent on rejecting him.

Nonfiction
A Life in Arctic Alaska
By
Seth Kantner

This fascinating account of life on North America’s last frontier chronicles the transformation of the Arctic as the mainstream moves relentlessly north. Essays and photographs offer an ode to respect—that oft-forsaken, unromantic quality—for the land, for animals, and for “something as virtuous as gathering food.”

Nonfiction
A Life in Arctic Alaska
By
Seth Kantner

This fascinating account of life on North America’s last frontier chronicles the transformation of the Arctic as the mainstream moves relentlessly north. Essays and photographs offer an ode to respect—that oft-forsaken, unromantic quality—for the land, for animals, and for “something as virtuous as gathering food.”

Author Q & A

  • Question

    How authentic do you think the popular image of Alaska as the wild, rugged, uncharted West is? 

    Book Browse
    Answer

    Depends on your perspective––in the Brooks Range in a storm in midwinter, you could say it’s pretty rugged. But a lot of folks come in the summer and fall; they have GPSs and often now satellite phones. For $3.95 they can buy detailed USGS maps of every bend in every slough. Alaska, that I knew as a kid, is gone; the land is still here but planes fly over it relentlessly—from my perspective—carrying everything that Americans have too. [Read more at bookbrowse.com]

  • Question

    Whenever we think of “Great Alaskan Novels,” we invariably think of Jack London. Did his writings influence you in Ordinary Wolves? 

    Book Browse
    Answer

    Very much so. Part of the reason I became a writer was Jack. He said when you spat or pissed it crackled and froze before it hit the ground. It never did that when I was a kid, reading Jack––it got to 78 below one time and it never did that! But the whole world believed it did because of London. Later, much later, I realized his descriptions of the cold and north were very good. Plus he wrote and lived and drank a lot––things I could at least relate somewhat to. [Read more on bookbrowse.com]

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