The Silence of the NorthWhen she was nine years old, Olive Fredrickson witnessed her mother's death in the Arctic wilderness. At nineteen, she married a trapper who led her into a perilous life far removed from the comforts of civilization. Told from a harrowing first-person perspective, Fredrickson recounts the hair-raising experiences of her first years in the frozen wasteland that was her husband's hunting ground. When her attempt to run a farm single-handedly, after her husband's death, threatened to end in ruin, Fredrickson walked 40 miles alone to the nearest village, in a desperate attempt to obtain food for her starving family by bartering against future crops. It was a life-or-death journey filled with bears, wolves, and unparalleled danger. The Silence of the North is a story of extraordinary adventure, courage, and human determination in the face of impossible odds. (6 X 9, 240 pages, b&w photos) |
Contents
The House of Sadness | 1 |
North to the Peace | 10 |
Goodwins Halfway House | 22 |
Copyright | |
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ahead Athabasca Landing Athabasca River baby bank bear boat boys British Columbia brush bull cabin calf camp canoe Caribou John caught Columbia game deer dogs Edmonton eyes Father feet fire fish Fort Chipewyan Fort Fitzgerald Fort McMurray Fort Smith girl grizzly hard head heard homestead horses hundred hunting killed knew Lake Lake Athabasca little Olive lived load looked married McLeod Lake McMurray meat miles minute Moose Portage morning moved muskeg muskrat never night Northern Echo pack pole Prince George pulled rifle Rollo scow shore shot side Slave snow spring started stayed Stuart River summer tent thing told Tomato Creek took tracks trail trapline trapper trapping tree trip trout turned Vala Vanderhoof wagon wait walked wanted watched White-Ear wild winter wolves woman