Reviews
I was knocked sideways by this book and quite unexpectedly.
Adam Weymouth takes his place beside the great travel writers like Chatwin, Thubron, Leigh Fermor, in one bound. But like their books this is about so much more than just travel.
Weymouth combines
acute political, personal and ecological understanding, with the most beautiful writing reminiscent of a young Robert Macfarlane . . . He is, I have no doubt, a significant voice for the future . . .
a really outstanding new contemporary British voice . . . I've never seen such a strong and excited consensus among the judges for a winner.
Lyrical ... The elegiac tone that fills
Kings of the Yukon, the sorrow at the loss of culture and nature in the wilderness, is
an unavoidable reflection of life in the 21st century
A
rich and fascinating book ... So vivid it reads like a thriller ...
I was hooked
[Weymouth's] account ... is
so assured, so accomplished, that I found it hard to believe it was his first book ... rich in characters, and beautifully written.
An epic ... Eloquent and tautly written
[A]
brilliant account of a summer spent paddling the 2,000-mile length of the Yukon River...
Kings of the Yukon succeeds as
an adventure tale,
a natural history and a work of art. Its various threads of context and back story are woven seamlessly into the daily panorama of the river journey
Dazzling, often in unexpected ways, Adam Weymouth is a wonderful travel writer, nature writer, adventure writer - along the way, he is also
a nuanced examiner of some of the world's most fraught and urgent questions about the interconnectedness of people and the natural world.
This is the best kind of travel writing. Weymouth embarks on an ambitious journey - 2,000 miles down the Yukon in a canoe - voyaging, listening and learning.
An outstanding book
An enthralling account of a literary and scientific quest. Adam
Weymouth vividly conveys the raw grandeur and deep silences of the Yukon landscape, and endows his subject, the river's King Salmon, with a melancholy nobility
Adam Weymouth's account of his canoe trip down the Yukon River is both
stirring and heartbreaking. He ably describes a world that seems alternately untouched by human beings and teetering at the brink of ruin
A
moving, masterful portrait of a river, the people who live on its banks, and the salmon that connect their lives to the land. It is at once travelogue, natural history, and a meditation on the sort of wildness of which we are intrinsically a part. Adam
Weymouth deftly illuminates the symbiosis between humans and the natural world - a relationship so ancient, complex, and mysterious that it just might save us
Shift over Pierre Berton and Farley Mowat. You, too, Robert Service. Set another place at the table for Adam Weymouth, who
writes as powerfully and poetically about the Far North as any of the greats who went before him
Adam Weymouth writes of the Yukon River, the salmon and the people,
with language that flows and ripples like the water he describes. There may be a smoothness to the words, but pay attention, there are deep undercurrents here.
You can hear the water dripping from his paddle between each stroke as he travels that river. It mingles with the voices of the many people he visits along its shores
Beautiful, restrained, uncompromising. The narrative pulls you eagerly downstream roaring, chuckling and shimmering just like the mighty Yukon itself
An infatuated love letter to the river
I thoroughly enjoyed traveling the length of the Yukon River with Adam Weymouth, discovering the essential connection between the salmon and the people who rely upon them.
What a joy it is to be immersed in such a remote and wondrous landscape, and what a pleasure to be in the hands of such a gifted narrator
This book is
an important contribution to our understanding of threatened ecosystems and what it means to be human on the edge of ecological catastrophe. I loved the
sensitive but deeply powerful weave of pesca-poetry, knowledge and encounter that immersed me in the midst of the Yukon's forces and left me subtly transformed
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