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M**O
Kinda of boring...
Polly Evans ventured to Canada, and some parts of Alaska, prepared to learn about dog sledding. Not only does she learn about dog sledding, but she even helps in the legendary Yukon Quest. The cold, the dogs, the snow, all things she had to learn to deal with, one day at a time.Not really very interesting. She seems as helpless as ever, which is kind of sad. For example, in Fairbanks she can't even find a piece of fruit and a bag of tea. Yet she was at the Westmark Hotel in Fairbanks. The Westmark Hotel has one of those tourist shops. They have bananas! And I am sure they have a pile of tea of all kinds. I know, I was there in MAY! Saying Fairbanks did not have a grocery store is like saying that the ocean does not have sharks because none of them attacked you the last time you took a dip.But besides insulting the State of Alaska, and talking a lot about dog poop and complaining about how cold she was, the book is a tad boring. True, she does add a lot of the history but that could have been found in any history books of the cold, icy north. In the end, it feels like she was tired and didn't really wish to write this book. Just not as interesting as her book on China. Maybe being a useless tourist is only funny the first time? I hope her book on Spain is better.Oh, and I have no problem with her getting mad at the people who run the borders - I have problems with them too.
C**L
Another fun read from Polly Evans
Most of us will probably never see - never mind participate in! - a sled dog race. But Evans dives into the Arctic adventure that is life with sled dogs, showing how much love and care goes into raising - and racing them. If you have any interest in the subject, you'll enjoy this book.
J**S
A good documentary.
I'm interested in doing a wilderness camp out. As it was, I had done some research on the net and it was the very site where Polly had had her experience.I was recently in Norway and had a brief Husky sled experience there so now that it all makes sense, I'm looking forward to a taking it further in Yukon.
M**S
Well written travelogue
Very well written adventure travelogue. Polly did a great job making me feel like I was there experiencing what she was.
V**D
I LOVED IT I CAN'T WAIT FOR ANOTHER BOOK TO COME OUT HILARIOUS GREAT BOOK
LOVED IT HILARIOUS BOOK AS ALWAYS ONE OF HER BEST BOOKS SO FAR KEEP IT UP POLLY AND I WILL KEEP BUYING THEM AND READING THEM YOUR THE BEST TRAVEL HUMORUS EVER I LOVE YOUR BOOKS.
J**O
Great Story!
Very exciting story. A page turner!
S**L
Not as good as her other books...
Prior to this book, I read several of Polly Evans' other books, and they were quite entertaining. I just didn't get the same feeling from this one. It seemed like most of the book was about mundane things repeated over and over. "I scooped dog poop." "I fell off my sled for the 10th time." "It was REALLY cold." And the part of the book where she actually follows the Yukon Quest was definitely a let-down. I'm sure Alaska and the Yukon are very beautiful and interesting places, but I just didn't get the attraction of the area from what Polly has written.
A**G
Fun and Funny
The title of Polly Evans's book is, of course, a twist on the Noel Coward song "Mad Dogs and Englishmen" (they "go out in the midday sun"). In Polly's memoire, mad dogs and an English WOMAN go out in the midNIGHT sun.And the Northern Lights, and endless snowfields and forests, and iced roads and thawing rivers, and weird and wonderful people and DOGS, all of which she describes with grace and generosity and, occasionally, outright eloquence, in just those spots where it's called for.Generally, when I review a non-fiction book, I address things like bibliographies, indices, and charts. This personal memoire doesn't call for them, but it does need a better map of the area. The tracing of the Quest dogsled race route gives no idea how the author got from point to point on it by road: we need roads to follow the routes vehicles took and trailmaps to follow the snowmobiles, and there are many features she cites that are not located.But her story is terribly trenchant. I was born in England and raised in Montreal, and experienced the kind of culture (or climate) shock Canada presents to the unititiated; in Evans's book, you can experience it too.
S**H
I really enjoyed this!
This is a great little book that takes you out on the dogsled trail with the author and lets you see an wild cold area of Canada and a way of life that you can experience from a warm comfy reading position! I loved it and I recommend it.Susan Smith
K**F
I really loved this book
I really loved this book. It was an easy read and fast moving. I loved that the people and places are real and not made up. Muktuk Kennels is still up and running in the Yukon. I follow the thousand milers races in the North and some of the names in this book are still running dogs. THe story is really well written and kept we turning the pages. Well worth reading !
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