Leon Crane survived 81 days in freezing temperatures after his plane crashed. He was the only survivor. He had to brave cold, snow, hypothermia, frozen fingers, miles of walking, and desperate thoughts. Luckily, along the way, he found shelters that had items that enabled him to sleep, regain energy, eat, warm up, recoup! That was an intriguing story. There didn't seem to be enough of it. That story could have been told in less than 100 pages. What fluffs up the nonfiction work is the addition of vignettes, ranging from personal biographies to Alaskan history to Soviets living in America (!) to a complete side story set in the 1990s about DNA research and missing soldiers recovery. That was also an interesting story, describing the recovery efforts of the plane, the sifting through the debris some fifty years later, the finding of Hoskins' remains, and the burial of Hoskins' in Arlington. Furthermore, the vignettes were insights into stories often not told or well known. The fighting in Aleutian islands and the faulty planes led to fatalities on American soil (territory). The selling of American planes to the Soviets and providing housing for Soviets in the United States was an interesting factoid, in light of our ensuing Cold War post WWII. The book didn't read smoothly. It felt disjointed. However, while at times it felt tiresome jumping from point to point, each bit was interesting. As you can see from the following quotes and historical tidbits, it went everywhere!
Interesting facts:
Dutch Harbor/US base in Aleutian Islands saw the first Japanese bombers; Quite of a bit of drinking and gambling took place there to pass the time (p43, 44)
Our B-26 bombers needed 600 feet to trigger the bombs; without that, they's simply bounce! (p45)
On Umnak, they dubbed the single tree living there the "Umnak National Forest." It was brought in for the Colonel's dog Skooch! Awww! (p47)
"On Attu...more than 1000 Japanese soldiers stormed a settlement with fewer than fifty people. One resident was killed, and the rest were sent to a prison camp in Japan...they passed the time sewing little silk bags for the religious items carried by Japanese soldiers. About a third of the Attu detainees died in Japanese camps...On Kiska...five hundred [Japanese] marines...overran a US Navy weather station with ten men and a dog...One soldier...survived." (p49) Americans took back Attu a year later, after warning them with leaflets, shaped like the brown leaf of the kiri tree...which symbolizes loss and regret, "ill omen of the inevitable downfall of militarism." They were decimated. Needless to say, those on Kiska avoided a fight by leaving!
"Combatants die and suffer. So do people caught in the middle. No euphemisms such as counting civilian casualties as 'collateral damage' can cloud this fact." p55
Importance of b-24 p55
"Hunger can be an unpredictable companion...Small scoops of snow helped a little, but did almost nothing to curb his thirst...monstrous ironies of the Far North. That seemingly inexhaustible supply of water is an illusion. It takes huge amounts of powdered snow-melted or warmed into slush-to satisfy thirst." p61
"You can't just go out and kill a bear and let it rot." "Animal spirits are displeased by a hunter not utilizing an entire carcass." "Nature's rhythms and continuity...are reminders of the humility we must retain and the innocence we cannot let slip away. 'Nature grows over me and I have died out of the human world.' (Emerson) p69
1882-SS Illinois-200 Russian Jews leave after Jews are blamed for the bombing murder of Czar Alexander II and placed in pograms p77/78
Sweating/moisture-frostbite and gangrene p92
"There were no walls or barbwires cutting him off as with POWs. He wasn't pinned under wreckage. Only space and the winter stood in his way." p93/94
History of Fairbanks/Barnette-con artist? p101
83000 servicemen are still MIA or KIA and not found. 73,000 are from WWII. p112
Lend Lease program-supply routes for the Russians-from Montana where there was a Soviet contingency to Canada to Alaska to Russia-8000 planes-Ladd Field had Soviets pilots as they collected planes-bars/ladies-Russians loaded up on materials while in states-not a secret but never reported-red light district "Line"-create a Jewish republic in Siberia!?! p118-127 DID NOT KNOW ABOUT ANY OF THIS
"Before the rise of the Nazis, the symbol of the 45th was a swastika, one of the common markings used by the Native Plains tribes." p136 WHAT! WOW!
As quoted, "It's dead easy to die. It's the keeping on living that's hard."-Australian explorer Douglas Mawson quoting Yukon poet Robert W. Service. p145
1952 Air Force C-124 cargo plane crash east of Anchorage p154
Japan-opium, heroin, and other drug trade-military addicted-"The use of narcotics is unworthy of a superior race like that Japanese. Only inferior races, races that are decadent, like the Chine, Europeans and the East Indians, are addicted to the use of narcotics." As quoted from a Japanese military manual. p159
"If I don't come back, I wouldn't have lived in vain nor wasted my life because I had known you. The two greatest privileges a man can have is fighting for his wife and family in what he believes is a just cause, regardless of the outcome to himself." In one of Hoskin's last letters home-p161
Due to the war, gold production fell by 85%! Woodchopper and Coal Creeks would have collapsed as communities were it not for the air strip. p188
Rice-map out Alaska from the air-Grinnell couple helped Crane-no relation to Grinnell Lake in Glaciar National Park
Wright-military flight-Selfridge-first aviation fatality in the American military-p211
Last lines, regarding Beckstead's interview with Leon Crane, "Leon did not want to talk about the crash. He did not want to talk about his survival. He left some part of himself back in Alaska. It's something he does not want to disturb or share. The wilderness can do that to people who face it alone. It becomes a private thing, an almost sacred thing." p218