Alaska Science Forum
November 17, 1999Article #1466
by Ned Rozell
This column is provided as a public service by the Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks, in cooperation with the UAF research community. Ned Rozell is a science writer at the institute.
As a science writer at the Geophysical Institute, my favorite part of the
job is meeting men and women who explain their passion for science to me.
This week, I got a chance to interview a man who has had a profound influence
on my life.
Peter Jenkins, in Fairbanks as part of the university's "Writers-in-Residence"
program, wrote the book A Walk across America in 1979. He and his dog, Cooper,
walked from upstate New York to New Orleans in the early 1970s, staying
for months in small towns with people he'd met and discovering America along
the way.
I read his book in my early 20s. Especially appealing was his ability to
relate to people, from the poor family he lived with in Murphy, North Carolina,
to Governor George Wallace of Alabama. The images of his hike stayed with
me for more than 15 years, until I got a chance to do my own walk. In 1997,
I walked the length of the trans-Alaska pipeline with my dog, Jane. Like
Jenkins, I wrote a book about my trip (shameless plug: published by Duquesne
University Press and available in January, 2000). When he came to the University
of Alaska Fairbanks recently, I made an appointment to interview him.
To keep things in a science context (I've stretched a bit, forgive me),
I asked Jenkins about human nature, a subject he's qualified to talk about
after making a career of dropping in on strangers and writing about their
lives. How, for example, do you earn someone's trust after showing up at
their front door?
"I think everybody wants to be appreciated and understood for who
they are," he said. "If somebody sees that you're not judgmental,
they'll talk to you."
He gave the example of the Parker brothers, two men he profiled in his book
Along the Edge of America, in which he toured the Gulf of Mexico in a boat.
The brothers were fishermen who picked fights at Hell's Angels bars after
battling the weather in the Gulf for weeks. Jenkins wrote about the brothers:
"Red is the brother who is quick to boil. Billy, you better hope he
never boils." They had no use for Jenkins, a "soft-handed wimp"
hanging around their docking area writing stories.
Jenkins knew the brothers had an interesting story because of an intuitive
feeling he described as akin to what a person feels when he or she sees
someone attractive from across a room. Compelled to meet the brothers, he
interviewed other fishermen around the pier for days until word got around
that he was a fair fellow. In time, the Parker brothers, prefacing with
a few cuss words, asked him when he was going to talk to them.
Now working on a book about Alaska, Jenkins is living in Seward after spending some time in Southeast. He plans to be here two more years, gathering stories and experiences. Rather than walking, he's driving, boating and flying to discover more about that unique species known as Alaskans.