Upriver
Poems
by Kremers, Carolyn
102 p.
Format: paper and electronic, click "Buy This Book" for pricing options.
Price: $14.95
2013
Poet, nonfiction writer, and lifelong musician Carolyn Kremers moved to Alaska to teach in the remote Bering Sea coast village of Tununak when she was thirty-four. Her first book, Place of the Pretend People: Gifts from a Yup’ik Eskimo Village (a memoir), probed and celebrated that experience. Upriver continues the chronicle of Kremers’ personal journey deep into Alaska and the human soul. Mixing music, Yup’ik language, the natural world, honesty, and an intimate sense of the spiritual and the unobtainable, Kremers presents a cascade of poems made of beauty and pain. The poems fall into five settings—Tununak, the Interior, Shape-Shifting, Return to the Y-K Delta, and Fairbanks. Like salmon swimming instinctively upriver—toward home—this story confronts what it means and how it feels to love a person or a place, no matter the consequences.
Carolyn Kremers
Carolyn Kremers is a poet, writer, and musician
living in a cabin at the edge of Fairbanks, Alaska.
She has been artist-in-residence at Gates of the
Arctic National Park & Preserve and Denali National
Park & Preserve. She is the author of Place of the
Pretend People: Gifts from a Yup'ik Eskimo Village.