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Reviews for The Only Kayak: A Journey into the Heart of Alaska

 The Only Kayak magazine reviews

The average rating for The Only Kayak: A Journey into the Heart of Alaska based on 2 reviews is 4.5 stars.has a rating of 4.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2009-12-02 00:00:00
2006was given a rating of 5 stars Elizabeth A. Allerton
This book startled me. First - the author's voice. Kim is fully and completely open as he describes how a place brought about his metamorphosis. His honesty and authenticity commanded my attention. Even more impressive is his conviction. Kim describes how his experiences led to him becoming a 'conservationalist,' and he doesn't mince words about the sadness and challenges that came with standing on those convictions. This story has kept me up at night since I finished reading it. The courage it takes to stand on that line moved me. Kim lost some important friendships because of those convictions. That place were two people can't see eye to eye...where it is impossible to span the divide between opposing convictions - is deeply sad - but at the same time, profoundly courageous. Finally - this story strikes at something deeply personal - it gives voice to a collection of my experiences and musings regarding life in Southeast Alaska and our relationship with the natural world. It resurrected memories of hypocrisy as I witnessed a culture that once lived with deep respect for the land, but today has clearcut and raped that same land in the name of profit, leaving an ugly wasteland. Today, that same drive for profit has depleted our oceans and rivers, and I am a part of this process. Big halibut used to be the norm when fishing around Prince of Wales...but are now the exception. How many salmon did we happily fill our freezer with...only to sit there until freezer-burn took over because we took too many. How many good people and their families depend on livelihoods that do not respect the land that sustains us? In all, this is a profound book that touches some deep and difficult subjects. But his sometimes self-deprecating tone left me laughing-out-loud, and his touching insight into the side of human-nature that is profoundly generous left me tearing up. This is an incredible book for anybody who has considered their relationship with the natural world, or who considers nature their playground.
Review # 2 was written on 2019-10-09 00:00:00
2006was given a rating of 4 stars Matthew Schaaf
Have you ever wondered what that national park ranger collecting your entrance fee and warning you about the wildlife is really thinking and dreaming about? Kim Heacox begins his life in Alaska as a young seasonal ranger in Glacier Bay. There is a good chance two of the people who heard his cruise ship lecture were my maternal grandparents. He blossoms into a naturalist and conservationist whose photographs are every bit as amazing as his writing. I was drawn to "The Only Kayak" for the same reason Heacox is drawn to the kayak: It is a unique way to interact with our world. Your are more vulnerable to the capriciousness of mother nature while at the same time exposed to her creatures on their turf. Two of my most unforgettable experiences have been kayaking off the coast of Maui with a pod of dolphins leaping through the air and with a raft of sea otters using rocks to open shells in Monterey Bay. The fact that "The Only Kayak" is about so much more than just kayaking is both its greatest strength and weakness. I love the way Heacox weaves together his adventures with "geotheomorphology," local history, photography, literature and the Beatles as music therapy. What could be more awesome than swapping John Muir and F. Scott Fitzgerald quotes with a new friend while on an epic kayak journey? How he saves his future wife's life on a later trip is even more amazing. Unfortunately, the second half of the book gradually loses steam as Heacox increasingly focuses on his environmental activism, which I found tedious after a while. Even Heacox becomes profoundly bored at a meeting with the park superintendent. Getting married and finding regular jobs leaves Heacox and his friends wistfully staring at maps of places they wish they could explore. Heacox has a follow-up book on Denali, but he relates some of those experiences in "The Only Kayak" and I have had my fill of his environmental activism. I haven't been able to find the right book with his photography. Instead, I want to learn more about John Muir as well as his relationship with Teddy Roosevelt. I am not sure how close they became, but close enough for Muir to ask TR when he was going to outgrow his "childish habit" of killing all the wildlife he encountered. Douglas Brinkley's "The Wilderness Warrior" might just fit the bill.


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