After plans to live in Africa shatter, young journalist Laurie Sarkadi
moves to the Subarctic city of Yellowknife seeking wilderness and
adventure. She covers the changing socio-political worlds of Dene and
Inuit in the late '80s--catching glimpses of their traditional,
animal-dependent ways--before settling into her own off-grid existence
in the boreal forest. There, she experiences motherhood and its
remarkable synchronicities with the lives of caribou, dragonflys and
other creatures.
As a mother, and as a journalist, Sarkadi speaks up for abused women and
children, creating controversies that entangle her in long, legal
battles. When she looks to animals and the natural world for solace, she
encounters magic. Lessons from the natural world arrive weekly, if not
daily: black bears roam her dreams, as well as her deck, teaching
introspection; wolves inspire her to persevere.
This evocative memoir explores a more than two-decade long physical and
spiritual journey into the wild spaces of northern Canada, around the
globe and deep within.