Campbell, James (M.)

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Campbell, James (M.)

PERSONAL: Born in WI.

ADDRESSES: Home—Madison, WI. Agent—c/o Audra Boltion, Senior Publicist, Atria Books, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020. E-mail[email protected].

CAREER: Journalist and freelance writer for National Geographic Adventure, Men's Journal, Audubon, and other periodicals.

WRITINGS:

The Final Frontiersman: Heimo Korth and His Family, Alone in Alaska's Arctic Wilderness, Atria Books (New York, NY), 2004.

SIDELIGHTS: James Campbell's first book is an intimate portrait of his cousin, Heimo Korth, a citizen of Alaska who makes a living off the land. Korth fled his native Wisconsin in the 1970s like many a rugged romantic who dreamed of a solitary life in the Arctic wilderness. Unlike the vast majority of his fellow sojourners, however, Korth actually stayed in Alaska, learned survival skills from other hardy people living above the Arctic Circle, and supplied his wife and daughters with food and necessities by trapping desirable fur-bearing animals and shooting moose and caribou for food. Campbell, a journalist who writes for several outdoor magazines, convinced Korth to allow him to spend long periods of time watching his cousin work his trap lines and balance the needs of his teenaged daughters with a devotion to the harsh wilderness. The Final Frontiersman: Heimo Korth and His Family, Alone in Alaska's Arctic Wilderness serves as a chronicle of Korth and his family, who spend most of the year 250 miles from the nearest road.

Korth is one of only seven non-Native Americans with a permit to live within the boundaries of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. When Campbell arrives at the family's primitive cabin, a life-altering decision looms. Korth's daughters, home-schooled by his Eskimo wife, want to attend high school in Fairbanks. Korth and his wife love the wilderness and are comfortable living in conditions that would be considered primitive even in a Third World country. "Anyone interested in a wilderness existence will enjoy this book," observed Coletta Ollerer in Reviewer's Bookwatch. According to Dennis McCann in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, "That [Korth] is one of the very last white men to eke out a living in the harsh northern environment makes his dream, and his story, all the more remarkable." McCann felt that Campbell's account of this singular family "is ably told," adding that Campbell's "well-written first book is one way of honoring that difficult independence." A critic for Kirkus Reviews concluded: "Heimo's endurance and courage are admirable, and Campbell does his best to portray them in a way that even citified readers can appreciate."

BIOGRAPHICAL AND CRITICAL SOURCES:

PERIODICALS

Booklist, May 15, 2004, Gilbert Taylor, review of The Final Frontiersman: Heimo Korth and His Family, Alone in Alaska's Arctic Wilderness, p. 1593.

Chicago Tribune, December 26, 2004, Lew Freedman, "Rugged Lifestyle Fit for Top of the World," p. 13.

Kirkus Reviews, March 15, 2004, review of The Final Frontiersman, p. 254.

Library Journal, April 1, 2004, Joseph L. Carlson, review of The Final Frontiersman, p. 112.

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, May 26, 2004, Dennis McCann, "'The Final Frontiersman' Tells of a Rugged Individual, an Unyielding Land."

New York Times Book Review, June 13, 2004, Tyler D. Johnson, review of The Final Frontiersman, p. 24.

Publishers Weekly, March 8, 2004, review of The Final Frontiersman, p. 60.

Reviewer's Bookwatch, November, 2004, Coletta Ollerer, review of The Final Frontiersman.

ONLINE

James Campbell Home Page, http://www.jamesmcampbell.net (February 16, 2005).

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