The handcrafted life of Dick Proenneke
(2021)

Nonfiction

Book

Call Numbers:
NEW 508.092/ROBINSON,M

0 Holds on 1 Copy

Availability

Locations Call Number Status
New & Popular Genl Nonfic NEW 508.092/ROBINSON,M Due: 5/21/2024

Details

PUBLISHED
Covington, KY : Lost Art Press LLC, [2021]
DESCRIPTION

xx, 436 pages : illustrations, color maps, color photographs ; 29 cm

ISBN/ISSN
9781954697058, 1954697058
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Includes index

Foreword -- Introduction -- Explanation to the reader -- Starting from scratch -- A land of snow & ice -- The cache -- Five-gallon gas cans -- Made from spruce -- Tin cans -- The elgin & the arctic tern -- Gifts & barter -- Repairing with zeal -- Character sketches -- Acknowledgments -- Epilogue -- Index

"Millions of PBS viewers first met Dick Proenneke through the program 'Alone in the Wilderness,' which documents Dick's 30-year adventure in the Alaskan wilderness. On the shores of Twin Lakes, Dick built his cabin and nearly all of the household objects he required to survive, from the ingenious wooden hinges on his front door to the metal ice creepers he strapped to his boots. And now, 'The Handcrafted Life of Dick Proenneke' examines this adventure through the lens of Dick's tools and the objects he made. Written by Monroe Robinson -- the caretaker of Dick's cabin and his personal effects -- the book weaves together vintage photos and entries from Dick's journals plus new drawings and images to paint a portrait of a man fully engaged in life and the natural world around him. In 1999, after departing Twin Lakes at the age of 82, Dick donated his cabin and all its contents to the National Park Service. For 19 summers, beginning in 2000, Monroe and his wife, K. Schubeck, served as caretakers for Dick's cabin, all the while honoring his motto of 'keeping it true.' The cabin, its objects and this book show how you can make anything you need from almost nothing...No one holds a more intimate knowledge of Dick's handcrafted life than Monroe, and just as Dick shared his life through letters and film, Monroe knew he had a responsibility to share all that he had learned. This book, which includes excerpts from more than 7,000 pages of Dick's transcribed journals along with hundreds of photos, dozens of illustrations, and Monroe's thoughtful and detailed commentary, is the result. It's nonfiction, how-to, adventure and memoir, but at its heart, it's a guidebook on how to live a life that's 'true,' with materials found and a few simple tools. Appealing to woodworkers, toolmakers, homesteaders, hikers, naturalists, conservationists, survivalists and lovers of Alaska, this book is for those who want to know how one man lived an intentional life, the kind of life many dream of living." -- from LostArtPress.com