海角大神

The Quiet World: Saving Alaska鈥檚 Wilderness Kingdom, 1879-1960

Development or conservation? Douglas Brinkley traces the debate over Alaska's riches.

The Quiet World: Saving Alaska鈥檚 Wilderness Kingdom 1879-1960 By Douglas Brinkley Harper Collins 592 pp.

In The Quiet World, historian Douglas Brinkley pens an epic about America鈥檚 Far North 鈥 you know, the place Sarah Palin is from. But just as book covers can sometimes be misleading, so, too, are subtitles, and the subtitle for Brinkley鈥檚 volume is: 鈥淪aving Alaska鈥檚 Wilderness Kingdom, 1879-1960.鈥

Based on that description, a reader might expect a backward-looking narrative, long on soporific tree-hugger reflection and short on contemporary relevance.

Instead, 鈥淭he Quiet World鈥 is an homage to the wisdom of recent ancestors 鈥 avowed capitalists and preservationists 鈥 who fought for restraint against brazen attempts to conquer nature. And that is precisely what makes this book a poignant cautionary tale for policymakers considering quick get-rich fixes to long-term problems with ecological implications.

In 2010, the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge celebrated its 50th anniversary. Dramatic 20th-century events leading up to the sanctuary being created in 1960 represent a crescendo in Brinkley鈥檚 plot development over nearly 600 pages.

But despite that landmark victory half a century ago, no protection is permanent. Soon debates will start anew on Capitol Hill as lawmakers decide again whether to allow oil and gas companies to invade the refuge premises.

Former Alaska governor, reality TV star, and possible presidential candidate Palin may cry 鈥渄rill, baby, drill,鈥 but polls show that a preponderance of Americans, who have a romantic fascination with Alaska, disagree.

Up in Alaska right now, energy issues, climate change, and a looming biodiversity crisis linked to the burning of fossil fuels are converging in a rugged mosaic of salmon-rich rain forest; tundra populated by polar bears, caribou, and musk oxen; and iconic mountains like McKinley (known as Denali to native peoples) sheathed in melting glaciers.

In Brinkley鈥檚 hands, the still-raging battle to save Alaska鈥檚 wild character is riveting. In contrast to the word 鈥渜uiet鈥 in the book鈥檚 title, a noisy racket has been raised by a number of prominent Americans across generations who believe their country鈥檚 destiny depends, in part, on how it stewards the state closest to the North Pole.

They know that something important about America will perish if free enterprise trumps the ability to set aside nature for nature鈥檚 sake. Among those inspired by Alaska鈥檚 grandeur have been 鈥 in Brinkley鈥檚 words 鈥 鈥渁 noble band of conservationist revolutionaries鈥 ranging from John Muir, Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt, and poet Robert Service to US Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, Rachel Carson, Jack Kerouac, and Gary Snyder.

It鈥檚 fascinating that a member of the high court could find spiritual kindredness with Beat poets. And it鈥檚 equally fascinating that it was conservative Republicans who first rose zealously to prevent Alaska from being overrun by the greed of Gilded Age tycoons.

鈥淭he Quiet World鈥 isn鈥檛 a book frozen in time; rather, it was conceived by the author as the second in a trilogy. The first was Brinkley鈥檚 critically acclaimed 鈥淭he Wilderness Warrior: Theodore Roosevelt and the Crusade for America,鈥 the story of how TR brought a green ethic to the White House and stood up to robber barons. The third and final book will come out in 2014, on the 50th anniversary of the federal Wilderness Act being passed (also led by citizen activists with ties to Alaska).

As John McPhee did so eloquently with 鈥淐oming Into The Country,鈥 Brinkley in 鈥淭he Quiet World鈥 reminds us why Alaska matters to the national psyche. In the arc of his storytelling, he covers 81 years of history that really serve as a foundational subtext to the birth of the modern environmental movement in America.

While Alaska鈥檚 sheer geographical size 鈥 it is twice as big as Texas 鈥 continues to captivate the imagination, Brinkley does an excellent job of revealing how it has also attracted its fair share of plunderers and hairbrained schemes. Perhaps the most audacious was a government plan, Project Chariot, concocted during the Eisenhower Administration, to set off a nuclear blast near the native village of Point Hope as part of an engineering feat to create a new commercial ocean port. Fortunately, calmer minds prevailed over lobbying by Edward Teller, 鈥渢he father of the hydrogen bomb.鈥

Alaska remains a symbol for conflicting values. Shattering the myth of inexhaustible resources, Brinkley notes how settlement patterns prior to Alaska achieving statehood copied many of the same mistakes made on the American frontier in the Lower 48. The state has survived bouts of overfishing and devastating logging practices on the Tongass National Forest, and is still engaged in ferocious clashes over the aerial gunning of wolves and plans to tap Alaska鈥檚 wealth of minerals and fossil fuels.

Through it all, citizen conservationists have proved to be brave, effective defenders, though the federal government has played a more heroic role. Coming to Alaska鈥檚 rescue, presidents and congresses alike have demonstrated an ability to consider horizons far broader than election cycles, states鈥 desires to industrialize more pristine areas, and the quarterly profit-loss statements of multinational companies.

Should Alaska follow the model of resource extraction that created economic wealth and boom times and yet left behind a multitude of serious environmental problems in the contiguous US, or should it be zealously safeguarded? For readers, there is no doubt which side Brinkley is on. But as 鈥淭he Quiet World鈥 reminds us, the future of Alaska is a story still being written. Every American is a stakeholder, whether we ever set foot there or not.

Todd Wilkinson is a freelance writer in Bozeman, Mont.

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