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Gold Hunting in Alaska

Chapter 4: PREFACE.
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About This Book

A first-person diary chronicles a group's voyage to Kotzebue Sound in Alaska to seek gold, following their sea journey, shipboard routines, and the personalities within an improvised mining company. The narrative blends practical details of outfitting and travel with episodic accounts of Arctic winter life, prospecting attempts, encounters with local peoples and wildlife, and reflections on the responsibilities and camaraderie among miners. Grounded in direct observation and plainspoken humor, the account alternates journal entries, travel anecdotes, and mining impressions to convey hardships, small comforts, and the mix of hope and disappointment that shapes northern gold-hunting ventures.

Gold Hunting in Alaska.

PREFACE.

The following story was originally written in pencil on any sort of paper at hand, and intended merely for "the folks at home." It is only by a prior claim to the manuscript that the young gold-hunter's mother has obtained his consent to publish it. The diary has been changed but little, nor has much been added to make it as it stands. The narrative is true from beginning to end, including the proper names of persons and vessels and mining companies. It is offered to the David C. Cook Publishing Company with no further apologies for its sometimes boyish style of construction. It will give the reader, be he man or boy, a hint as to how a young fellow may spend his time in the long Arctic winter, or in the whole year, even though he be a disappointed gold-hunter. It may afford suggestion to mining companies continually going to Alaska as to their responsibility to each other and to the natives of the "frozen North." It may give "the folks at home" some intimation as to possible "good times" under trying circumstances. Blue fingers may not necessarily denote a blue heart.

ELIZABETH GRINNELL.

Pasadena, Cal., Jan. 15, 1901.