James A. Michener was one of the world’s most popular writers, the author of more than forty books of fiction and nonfiction, including the Pulitzer Prize–winning Tales of the South Pacific, the bestselling novels The Source, Hawaii, Alaska, Chesapeake, Centennial, Texas, Caribbean, and Caravans, and the memoir The World Is My Home. Michener served on the advisory council to NASA and the International Broadcast Board, which oversees the Voice of America. Among dozens of awards and honors, he received America’s highest civilian award, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, in 1977, and an award from the President’s Committee on the Arts and Humanities in 1983 for his commitment to art in America. Michener died in 1997 at the age of ninety.
Praise for Alaska
“Few will escape the allure of the land and people [Michener]
describes. . . . Alaska takes the reader on a journey through one
of the bleakest, richest, most foreboding, and highly inviting
territories in our Republic, if not the world. . . . The characters
that Michener creates are bigger than life.”—Los Angeles Times Book
Review
“Always the master of exhaustive historical research, Michener
tracks the settling of Alaska [in] vividly detailed scenes and
well-developed characters.”—Boston Herald
“Michener is still, sentence for sentence, writing’s fastest
attention grabber.”—The New York Times
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