Shooting Polaris: A Personal Survey in the American West Review

Shooting Polaris: A Personal Survey in the American West
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A very sensitive and intelligent writer, Hales painted an honest and compelling story of an important time in history for a young college student. His description of his work, the land, and his discovery of self cause a reader to reflect on experiences that lead to finding meaningful life work. I recommend the book.

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Shooting Polaris is John Hales's fascinating and far-reaching account of working as a government surveyor in the southern Utah desert. In it, he describes his search for a place in the natural world, beginning with an afternoon spent tracking down a lost crew member who cracked up on the job and concluding with his supervising a group of at-risk teenagers on a backpacking trip in the Escalante wilderness. In between, he depicts a range of experiences in and outside nature, including hostile barroom encounters between surveyors and tourists, weekends spent climbing Navajo Mountain and floating what remains of Glen Canyon, and late-night arguments concerning the meaning and purpose of nature with the eccentric polygamist who ran the town in which the surveyors parked their bunk trailers.

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