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Ada Blackjack: A True Story of Survival in the Arctic
by Jennifer Niven
There, surrounded by seas of ice, Ada Blackjack wrote the real epic
of the North.
- The World Magazine, October 30, 1927
Ada Blackjack was an unlikely hero - an unskilled 23-year-old Inuit
woman with no knowledge of the world outside Nome, Alaska. Divorced,
impoverished, and despondent, she had one focus in her life - to care
for her sickly young son. In September 1921, in search of money and
a husband, she signed on as seamstress for a top-secret expedition
into the unknown Arctic.
It was controversial explorer Vilhjalmur Stefansson who sent four
young men and Ada Blackjack into the far North to desolate, uninhabited
Wrangel Island. Only two of the men had set foot in the Arctic before.
They took with them six months' worth of supplies on Stefansson's
theory that this would be enough to sustain them for a year while
they lived off the land itself. But as winter set in, they were struck
by hardship and tragedy. As months went by and they began to starve,
they were forced to ration their few remaining provisions. When three
of the men made a desperate attempt to seek help, Ada was left to
care for the fourth, who was too sick to travel. Soon after, she found
herself totally alone.
Upon Ada's miraculous return after two years on the island, the international
press heralded her as the female Robinson Crusoe. Journalists hunted
her down, but she refused to talk to anyone about her harrowing experiences.
Only on one occasion--after being accused of a horrible crime she
did not commit-- did she speak up for herself. All the while, she
was tricked and exploited by those who should have been her champions.
Filled with exciting adventure and fascinating history, Ada Blackjack
is a gripping and ultimately inspiring tale of a woman who survived
a terrible time in the wild only to face a different but equally trying
ordeal back in civilization.
Buy the book from Barnes
& Noble or amazon.com!
Also available in English from other amazon.com sites worldwide.
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