I received a free copy of Chasing Lakes by Katey Walter Anthony, PhD from TLC Books Tours at no charge. All opinions are my own.
About Chasing Lakes:
An aquatic ecologist and permafrost scientist recalls her captivating adventures across the Arctic studying climate change, her quest to find belonging and family, and her journey of faith in a world of science in this poignant, eye-opening, and hopeful memoir in the spirit of Lab Girl, Educated, and Finding the Mother Tree.
Katey Walter Anthony’s enchantment with lakes began when she was growing up amid the Sierra Nevada mountains. Today, her love for these bodies of water have taken her to the deepest reaches of Alaska and Siberia, where she is undertaking pioneering research on methane emissions. Chasing Lakes is her story: one-part adventure—complete with shipwrecks and treacherous treks through Arctic storms by helicopter, snowmobile, and foot to measure greenhouse gases—part coming-of-age tale, as she searches for belonging in the wake of a broken childhood, and part spiritual quest to find a wholeness science cannot fill.
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Somewhere between the remote, frozen landscapes of Siberia and her rough cabin in Alaska, she discovers her spiritual and emotional home when she meets Peter, a bright and humble Minnesota farmer who reinvigorates her faith and helps ground her. Yet finding love and fulfillment brings its own challenges. The closer she gets to having the family she’s always wanted, the further she’s pushed from the important field work that is her passion.
Chasing Lakes is a chronicle of a woman seeking truth, adventure, scientific discovery, family, love, and grace. Both an eye-opening look from the frontlines of the climate crisis and an intimate portrait of a brilliant scientist, Chasing Lakes is memoir writing at its finest: beautiful, complex, revelatory, and moving.
About the Author:
Katey Walter Anthony PhD is a professor of aquatic ecology, biogeochemistry, and permafrost science at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. Her research focuses on methane emissions from Arctic lakes, the degradation of permafrost, and their associated feedbacks to global climate through the carbon cycle. She and her work have been featured in National Geographic, Washington Post, 60 Minutes, Vice, The Guardian, the New York Times newsletter, Newsweek, Nature Magazine, and Leonardo DiCaprio’s documentary Ice on Fire
My Opinion:
As I sit here typing this is almost 85 degrees in Vermont in May. While that has little to do with the essential topic of Chasing Lakes it does have something to do with Climate Change. It is far too early to be this hot.
This book is not an easy, breezy read on the scenery the author encountered in her life. Although that does play a role in parts. It’s a memoir of her challenging childhood that ultimately finds her chasing … something and ending up in Alaska and Russia. She finds her personal redemption with a farmer from Minnesota and in God. I was not expecting all the religion and me being Atheist it rather put me off.
But as I find my solace where I do I don’t have issues with others finding theirs’ where they do. I just don’t tend to read about God. So with that being written I enjoyed the parts about science, despaired the parts about how Climate Change is impacting our Earth and ignored the parts about God.
Where does that leave me with this book? A little tricky to rate as it was not quite what I was expecting. So how about I ignore the God part and just do my best to rate the rest? Or do I rate the whole because the God part wasn’t more fully expressed in the synopsis?
Decisions, decisions.
The heat must be impacting my book reviewing as our AC is out. Not good timing for that, eh?
Rating:
4 – not God Part
3 – not mentioning God Part
3.5 overall