South to Alaska Audiobook By Nancy Owens Barnes cover art

South to Alaska

A True Story of Courage and Survival from America's Heartland to the Heart of a Dream

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South to Alaska

By: Nancy Owens Barnes
Narrated by: Nancy Owens Barnes
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About this listen

A true story of courage and survival, South to Alaska carries listeners from the heartland of America to the last frontier... the hard way.

Born in the dusty heart of Oklahoma in 1916, 10-year-old Melvin sees a photograph of a cabin in the Alaska wilderness in his fourth-grade geography book and dreams of living there. Nearly 50 years later he builds a 47-foot boat in his Arkansas backyard, launches it on the Arkansas River, and cruises 10,000 miles to Alaska by way of the Panama Canal. Melvin has never been south of the United States/Mexico border and has never been on a boat in the open ocean.

“Learn by doing”, he says.

In South to Alaska, author Nancy Owens Barnes takes listeners on two journeys. On one, listeners follow a young boy's dream that begins in a one-room, Oklahoma schoolhouse in 1926, and ends decades later on an island in southeast Alaska. On the other, listeners become a passenger aboard the Red Dog as it cruises along the Arkansas and Mississippi Rivers to the Gulf of Mexico where, in 1973, Melvin begins a solo journey along the Caribbean coasts of Mexico and Central America, through the Panama Canal, then into the Pacific Ocean to Alaska. Plagued by mechanical problems, international fraud, violent ocean storms, threats of foreign jail, illness and loneliness, Melvin fears a deadly end before reaching the place of his dreams and returning to the woman he loves. South to Alaska chronicles Melvin's 10,000-mile journey through a dangerous world he knows little about, to a world he cannot forget.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.

©2009 Rushing River Press (P)2016 Rushing River Press
Adventurers, Explorers & Survival Travel Writing & Commentary Water Sports Alaska
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What listeners say about South to Alaska

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Living his dream with nightmares, too

memoir, biography, travelog, adventure, nonfiction

Highly detailed tribute by daughter to her father who beat nearly insurmountable odds to realize his dream. Manually skilled and highly creative, he made a steel boat from scratch and determined to sail it from Arkansas to Alaska. With no Spanish and a meager understanding of captaining a boat in unfamiliar waters, he encountered crooks and unfamiliar business practices as well as unseen water hazards. Costs accumulated beyond expectations, and the separation and dwindling finances made for friction between husband and wife which were resolved when he achieved his goal. He started work in Ketchikan and did well. After retiring, he built a house on a nearby island. There they lived well and with new interests for another sixteen years until the book ends with more vivid word pictures. The ebook and audio both have pdf with photos, maps, and more.
I have the audio, and I always feel that the author makes the best narrator. This is certainly true for this book.
I requested and received a free review copy from the publisher, author, or narrator courtesy of AudioBookBOOM.

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1 person found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Enjoyed reading but listening was more fun.

Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?

Yes, have recommended the book in the past.

What other book might you compare South to Alaska to and why?

I enjoy biographies from the WWII era and although this is a bit later it is just as exciting..

What does Nancy Owens Barnes bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you just read the book?

When my husband and I were sitting in the car, listened to the book. I remarked "it sounds like Nancy is in the car with us" We loved listening to her tell her own story. Reminded me of enjoying Frank McCourt reading Angela's Ashes or Bill O'Reilly reading one of his books..

Did you have an extreme reaction to this book? Did it make you laugh or cry?

Yes, I laughed and got upset by the people who took advantage of her father.

Any additional comments?

Inspires someone to do something unbelievable. If he can, why not me. Why not indeed.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Amazing story - dreams can come true!

Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?

Oh yes!

What did you like best about this story?

I liked the lifelong commitment to a dream and the work ethic and ingenuity that made it come true.

If you were to make a film of this book, what would the tag line be?

A boy's dream, a man's amazing journey!

Any additional comments?

Fascinating account! So glad Nancy Ownes Barnes recorded this amazing tale about her Father's voyage before it was lost. I was inspired by her father's unyielding comittment to his childhood dream of living in Alaska I was impressed by her father's abilities and work ethic - who builds an 18 ton boat in their backyard? I was touched s by her parent's devotion to each other and their dreams, the sweet way her father referred to her mother as "pretty lady," and the family bonds that were as strong as the steel that the Red Bird was made of. I cried when they were cheated, cheered when they crossed back into American waters and jumped up and down when they finally reached Alaska. If you would like to believe that dreams can really be reached and that hard work still wins, listen to this one!

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Worst Narrator I’ve ever heard

The story itself was not bad. The author’s first person style was a little irritating, but you get used to it. However, the narration was terrible. She sounded like a monotonous computer voice - the cadence was robotic and did not flow.

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