Get Free Ebook , by Eric Sevareid

Get Free Ebook , by Eric Sevareid

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, by Eric Sevareid

, by Eric Sevareid


, by Eric Sevareid


Get Free Ebook , by Eric Sevareid

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, by Eric Sevareid

Product details

File Size: 1575 KB

Print Length: 248 pages

Publisher: Minnesota Historical Society Press; 1 edition (October 25, 2010)

Publication Date: October 25, 2010

Language: English

ASIN: B00492CQZ2

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#961,326 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

First published in 1935, just five years after graduating from high school, the story recounts how the just-graduated young Arnold Eric Sevareid and Walter C. Port set out on a 2250 canoe trip from Fort Snelling in Minneapolis to Hudson Bay. They were only 18-year-old novice canoeists, they had only rudimentary maps for the last 500 miles, and they were in a race with a winter that was nipping at their heels as they neared their destination nearly 4 months after their departure. They were constantly battling the elements and terrain the entire length of the trek. And there was no record of anyone ever having done it before. First, because there was no need to. Hudson Bay is a meaningful destination only if approached by sea. And second, by 1930 when young Sevareid and Post made their expedition there was already a railroad that would take you, in comfort, to the bay.But make it they did, with some inspiration from Rudyard Kipling. It was an exercise in living on minimal standard subsistence food, poor equipment and clothing, and minimal navigational guides. And though they received emotional support from friends and family, experts and those with experience on the route were spar in their encouragement. What I find even more amazing was that the young Sevareid was able to write and publish his book covering this saga while still an undergraduate student at the U of Minnesota.I was able to detect flashes of brilliance in the writing of this amazing 23-year-old, who would go on to become one of America's great journalists.

"To retain the courage of one's doubts as well as one's convictions in this world of dangerously passionate certainties" ~ Eric SevareidI grew up in the 1970s hearing of Eric Sevareid, of course, but never paid attention to him. Yesterday I read his Canoeing with the Cree, his book about his 2250 mile canoe trip in 1930 with his friend (both who had just graduated high school) from Minneapolis to the Hudson Bay. Everyone said it couldn't be done, but they did it. That, and hearing the above quoted line of his in his farewell to his viewers, has led me, at least from these two margins, to respect this man.Fun book to read. Inspiring. Anyone who has paddled, say, fifty miles in a canoe will want to read this book.

Canoeing With the CreeIt is 1930 and two teenagers graduate from a Minneapolis high school. One of them, Eric Sevareid has no plans for the summer but a classmate; Walter Port talks him into joining him on a canoe trip he had been thinking about for some time. It would be canoeing from Minneapolis up the Minnesota River and Red River into Canada and to the Hudson Bay. Walter knew enough about the plan to know there would be rivers, lakes and streams all the way to Hudson Bay. They didn’t know a lot more about what such a journey would involve nor did they have the money or experience for such a trip.Being teen age boys, these details did not deter them. They made a list of items they thought would need, somewhat pared down to fit their budget. The obtained a eighteen foot square sterned canvas covered canoe for the trip. Eric, who had been the editor of the school paper, suggested they get a sponsor, maybe a paper that would print stories they would submit while they made the journey. They were turned down by some prospects but did find the Minneapolis Star was interested and they were given a stipend to help them get started and another payment if they finished the trip. And so they took off from Minneapolis on June seventeenth with worried parents waving and hoping they would return in a few days after facing the reality of what they were attempting to do. Something no one, as far as they knew, had ever attempted before. The trip up the Minnesota and Red River into Canada and Winnipeg had been mostly tedious but time consuming. They did find people along the route had been following them because of the stories being run in the Minneapolis Star. At times this became helpful when they ran into difficulties and also provided them with some free meals along the way. However they were worried because they were running behind their planned schedule and the possibility of not making it to Hudson Bay before a freeze up. Also the hazardous and largely unknown part of the trip lay ahead. On Lake Winnipeg they experienced ocean sized waves and wind that kept them off the lake for day making the completion of the journey before freeze up even less likely. After leaving lake Winnipeg they faced five hundred miles of wilderness and little chance of encountering other people. If they ran into trouble there would be no one to help them. If the streams would freeze up they would have little chance of surviving with only the summer clothing they wore. Their maps will rudimentary the possibility of becoming lost was a real possibility. No GPS. No means of communicating with the outside world. They ran into rapids in which they could have lost the canoe and all their gear, but somehow they made it before freeze up and they got their end of trip payment from the Minneapolis Star. Great story, well written by Eric Sevareid.

An earlier reviewer mentioned a certain call, a certain similarity, a formless link to a couple of Jack London's works in the genre of literary naturalism. Sevareid is instead writing of the actual, is essentially writing a narrative with few symbols and metaphors compared with London's inspiring fiction that also runs deep into the heart. The Call of the Wild and White Fang often came to my mind also. I wonder if Port and Sevareid had read London? I'd bet they had.The call is to remove oneself from electrified and plumbed shelter, from safety and comfort, and to go long into the quiet wild. If that call has been previously heard, Canoeing with the Cree will call one forth again, and it might make the initial call.If you're a Minnesotan, a Midwesterner, or an American, Sevareid has made it easy to be proud that you are one, and without intendion to have that effect on his readers. His and Port's trip up into the great Northland was a monumental accomplishment.One of my nephews says he knows all about canoeing, that he learned it on a computer game. I wish that he would read this book, but always some device is in his hands and has all his attention.

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