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Fiction Historical

Haines Junction

by (author) David Thompson

Publisher
Caitlin Press
Initial publish date
Mar 2013
Category
Historical, Small Town & Rural, Humorous
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781927575048
    Publish Date
    Mar 2013
    List Price
    $19.95
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781927575123
    Publish Date
    Apr 2013
    List Price
    $9.99

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Description

Joshua Waldo Lake Shackelton, born in New Mexico in 1946, could never ignore the call of the wild. In 1964, spared from the draft, he slips up the coast as far as the tip of Vancouver Island before moving inland. Wending his way through BC's inlets and coastal mountains, Joshua discovers the nature of solitude; in the ports and villages, he discovers community.

 

Finally he reaches Haines Junction, in the Yukon Territory, where the Haines and Alaska highways meet. It is here that he discovers friendship (and gold). Miners catch gold fever, political conspiracies come to light and Joshua and his friends encounter the mystical and the mundane. When he finds himself at the centre of a mystery that includes the wreck of a military DC-3, a raft constructed by an ancient order of Japanese monks, and the wolfbear of Aleut myth, Joshua must work to unravel the threads and protect his friends from their own harebrained schemes. Suspenseful and warmly funny, Haines Junction is a tale of adventure and domesticity, loyalty and betrayal, and the laws of Yukon.

About the author

David Thompson is a general building contractor who has lived in the Yukon Territory since 1962. His love for the land and its people has inspired him to write short stories describing life in the Yukon. He has twice won Dawson City’s “Authors on Eighth” writing contest for short fiction and has had stories published in local newspapers. David lives in Whitehorse with his wife Wendy, a Montessori teacher, two children Adam and Shawna, son-in-law Gary and two wonderful grandsons, Cameron and Jordon.

David Thompson's profile page

Editorial Reviews

"Thompson is Yukon's answer to Stuart McLean."

--Laurie Glenn Norris, the Telegraph-Journal

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