Messages from the Bombing Range
by
Book Details
About the Book
It's a pleasure to be invited to enter deeply into worlds
you've never known. From the opening poem, "The Wild Child,"
in which we trek along side the poet, proceeding south southeast,
moving "slowly/on water," over the frozen surface of a creek in
interior Alaska, deep inside the bombing range of this
collection's title, to the vigorous next-to-last poem, "Cancer,"
Jim Hunter invites us along. He travels far. He opens his heart.
Jim's journey covers not just the "excellent thrilling
path" of "The Wild Child"-rich with footprints of wild creatures,
shifting weather, a "fingernail moon," and sibilant sounds of the
poet's skiis on dry snow-but quickly plunges down "the luge run
of philosophy." We see close up the frozen bombing range where
helicopters hover, piloted by young men "bug-eyed with night-vision
goggles" in the cold Alaska sky. Meanwhile, moose, lynx,
and bear run for cover, even the "fox tip-toe." A local trapper
waves his patent to his life style" bearing gold seals and notary
stamps," as the poet muses on the odd truce between "Generals
and Trappers and Others."
We meet up with lynx, coyote, and the cold country of
an old trapper, who seems to speak for one aspect of the poet and
who "wants no more/than more of it." Like the trapper of
"Trapper's Lament," Jim too seems to believe that: "The Weather
is my brother." And not a gentle sibling!
We venture to San Francisco, urban Fairbanks, and Big
Sur, too, but Jim's real subject is the deeper and darker terrain of
a human heart seeking peace, meaning, happiness, and glimpses
of truth. The poems hang together on the music of Jim's warm
and witty voice. Come along. Let's ponder Jim's messages with
him.
Jean Anderson
Fairbanks, Alaska
Also by Jim Hunter Messages from the Mountains
Reader Comments
"I like Jim Hunter's poetry...it imparts the tranquility and solitude of far away, remote places along with the sacrifices and dangers which come with being there...the poems bring forth passion and peace...he speaks from the heart about being in the wilderness...puts the burden on each and everyone of us to make our own decisions on where we fit in the environment."
Marcy H.
Moab, Utah
07-09-02
"Even though we approach poetry from opposite directions: I favor the
particular and Jim appears to favor the general, I enjoyed all the poems
in Messages From The Bombing Range .... my favorite is "if Not For
The Owl At Night"...which strikes me as a perfect poem, one which
captures the northern experience: the life within the stillness."
Tom Sexton
Alaska Poet Laureate
07-06-00
"Mr. Hunter reminds us that we can feel most alive and human in the surroundings where few humans exist. He took me to the wilderness, and I couldn't help but feel both the healing effects and vast aloneness of lengthy journies into the wilds. I completely enjoyed Mr. Hunter's work...the experience ended too soon. I will highly recommend this book to other poetry readers."
Westerville, OH
October 5, 2002
"It had honest prose and excellent style. I felt it brought out the best in living with nature in Alaska. I feel this poetry book is the Alaskan equal to John Denver's folk music about Colorado."
Rock Point, AZ
October 8, 2002
"I felt as if I were actually in Alaska with the writer, experiencing the same things he was experiencing. I especially liked the Magic Tree and No Aztec I."
Dickson, TN
October 1, 2002
About the Author
Born in Stockton, California in 1937
Jim Hunter arrived in Alaska in 1955
at eighteen years of age. He served four
years as an Air Force radar operator,
graduated from San Francisco State
College in 1963 with a degree in
Creative Writing. He worked as a pizza
cook, prison guard, newspaper reporter,
psychiatric technician, substitute
teacher, and radio announcer before returning to Fairbanks in
1966. Hunter has published over 100 articles on Alaska,
Mexico, and the western U. S. In 1976 Chronicle Books of
San Francisco published his widely acclaimed guide to
Mexico's Baja Peninsula, OFFBEAT BAJA. His other book
of poetry, Messages From Raven placed among a select group
of finalists in the 1987 NEW LETTERS LITERARY
AWARDS sponsored by the University of Missouri. Hunter
has worked in Alaska for many years as an insurance adjuster.
In 1985 he and Marilyn J. Mount, a counselor in the Fairbanks
North Star Borough School District, were married. Alternating
between a remote cabin in the Alaska Range Mountains south
of Fairbanks and their home in town, Jim and Marilyn Hunter
continue to live and to work in Alaska's still wild Interior.