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Lake Superior profiles [electronic resource] : people on the big lake / John Gagnon.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Great Lakes booksPublication details: Detroit, MI : Wayne State University Press, c2012.Description: 1 online resource (xiii, 201 p.) : maps, portsISBN:
  • 9780814336298 (electronic bk.)
  • 0814336299 (electronic bk.)
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Lake Superior profiles.DDC classification:
  • 977.49
LOC classification:
  • F552 .G34 2012eb
Online resources:
Contents:
Prologue: Shining Big-Sea-Water -- Paddle, pipe, and portage (Grand Portage, Minnesota) -- A work farm (Grand Marais, Minnesota) -- Sturgeon (a river on the Keweenaw Peninsula) -- The fable and the fate of La Truite de Lac (Marquette, Michigan) -- Coaster brook trout (Ahmeek, Michigan, and Ashland, Wisconsin) -- The wildflower child (Isle Royale National Park) --Rock of ages (a reef west of Isle Royale) -- The lakehead (Thunder Bay, Ontario) -- The start of something big (Duluth, Minnesota) -- Madmen, mysteries, and the pursuit of Jacques Cousteau (Houghton, Michigan) -- Looking for the Edmund Fitzgerald (Whitefish Bay, on the east end of the lake) -- This is home now (Hancock, Michigan) -- The ricer (Odanah, Wisconsin) -- The blood of our earth (Baraga, Michigan) -- A small place by a waterfall (north of Eagle River, Michigan).
Summary: Like Lake Superior itself, the communities of people surrounding the "Big Lake" are vast and full of variety, spanning state and international boundaries. In Lake Superior Profiles: People on the Big Lake, author John Gagnon gives readers a sense of the memorable characters who inhabit the area without attempting to take an exhaustive inventory. Instead, Gagnon met people casually and interviewed them, from a tugboat captain to an iron ore boat captain, Native Americans, and fishery biologists. Different though their stories are, all share a steadfast character, an attachment to the moody lake, and a devotion to their work. Lake Superior Profiles combines biography, history, folklore, religion, and humor. In Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Ontario, Gagnon visits the rivers, bays, small towns, larger cities, and nature preserves that surround Lake Superior to meet the people who make their homes there. Among those he meets are several fisherman, a botanist studying arctic wildflowers on Isle Royale, a former lighthouse keeper on a remote reef on the lake, a voyageur reenactor from Duluth, a woman who harvests wild rice each August in the Bad River Sloughs, and a monk living on the Keweenaw Peninsula. He also writes about three of the lake's major fish species, a rock formation steeped in lore called the Sleeping Giant, and the current fragile ecology of the Big Lake.--Publisher's description.
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
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Total holds: 0

Like Lake Superior itself, the communities of people surrounding the "Big Lake" are vast and full of variety, spanning state and international boundaries. In Lake Superior Profiles: People on the Big Lake, author John Gagnon gives readers a sense of the memorable characters who inhabit the area without attempting to take an exhaustive inventory. Instead, Gagnon met people casually and interviewed them, from a tugboat captain to an iron ore boat captain, Native Americans, and fishery biologists. Different though their stories are, all share a steadfast character, an attachment to the moody lake, and a devotion to their work. Lake Superior Profiles combines biography, history, folklore, religion, and humor. In Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Ontario, Gagnon visits the rivers, bays, small towns, larger cities, and nature preserves that surround Lake Superior to meet the people who make their homes there. Among those he meets are several fisherman, a botanist studying arctic wildflowers on Isle Royale, a former lighthouse keeper on a remote reef on the lake, a voyageur reenactor from Duluth, a woman who harvests wild rice each August in the Bad River Sloughs, and a monk living on the Keweenaw Peninsula. He also writes about three of the lake's major fish species, a rock formation steeped in lore called the Sleeping Giant, and the current fragile ecology of the Big Lake.--Publisher's description.

Prologue: Shining Big-Sea-Water -- Paddle, pipe, and portage (Grand Portage, Minnesota) -- A work farm (Grand Marais, Minnesota) -- Sturgeon (a river on the Keweenaw Peninsula) -- The fable and the fate of La Truite de Lac (Marquette, Michigan) -- Coaster brook trout (Ahmeek, Michigan, and Ashland, Wisconsin) -- The wildflower child (Isle Royale National Park) --Rock of ages (a reef west of Isle Royale) -- The lakehead (Thunder Bay, Ontario) -- The start of something big (Duluth, Minnesota) -- Madmen, mysteries, and the pursuit of Jacques Cousteau (Houghton, Michigan) -- Looking for the Edmund Fitzgerald (Whitefish Bay, on the east end of the lake) -- This is home now (Hancock, Michigan) -- The ricer (Odanah, Wisconsin) -- The blood of our earth (Baraga, Michigan) -- A small place by a waterfall (north of Eagle River, Michigan).

Description based on print version record.

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