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Klondike Fever The Life and Death of the Last Great Gold Rush

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ISBN-10: 0786713178

ISBN-13: 9780786713172

Edition: N/A

Authors: Pierre Berton

List price: $20.99
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Book details

List price: $20.99
Publisher: Basic Books
Publication date: 12/17/2003
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 494
Size: 5.50" wide x 8.25" long x 1.25" tall
Weight: 0.946
Language: English

Pierre Berton was born in 1920 and raised in the Yukon. He worked in Klondike mining camps during his university years, spending four years in the army, rising from private to captain/instructor at the Royal Military College in Kingston. After the military, Berton went to Vancouver where he began his career at a newspaper. At 21, he was the youngest city editor on any Canadian daily. He moved to Toronto in 1947, and at the age of 31 was named managing editor of Maclean's. In 1957 he became a key member of the CBC's public affairs flagship program, Close-Up, and a permanent panelist on Front Page Challenge. He joined The Toronto Star as an associate editor and columnist in 1958, leaving 4…    

Prelude: "... beyond that last blue mountain barred with snow ..."
Of a fateful encounter between a prospector and a squawman on the banks of a salmon stream called Thron-diuck, and what that led to
How Dawson was born, Circle City died, legends were lived, and fortunes won without the world being the wiser
Of treasure ships laden with gold by the ton and bearing the germs of an endemic disease called "Klondicitis," which drove a continent to madness
Being the tale of the Dead Horse Trail, where, every beast being expendable, men themselves became beasts
A chapter of paradoxes: of money that would buy nothing; of contestants who won a race, yet lost the prize; of a golden mountain that all could see but few could find; of a starvation winter when none needed relief save those who brought it
A chapter of deceptions, in which the easiest ways to wealth turn out to be the weariest and survival becomes sweeter than any fortune
An unbroken line of men, stretching into the cold skies, provides the stampede with its most memorable spectacle on the slopes of the Chilkoot Pass
How thirty thousand souls, in seven thousand homemade craft, were convoyed safely down five hundred miles of uncharted water to the city of gold
How Dawson City, flooded first by water, then by men, was transformed into a glittering metropolis of the north, where sounds of the human carnival were never stilled (except on the Sabbath)
Being a faithful account of the rise, reign, and violent death of Jefferson Randolph "Soapy" Smith, the dictator of Skagway
Nourished by gold, the "San Francisco of the North" runs wild for a year, burns itself out, and enters its long decline
Coda: "... the fault is not in the wealth, but in the mind ..."
A Note on Sources
Bibliography
Index