Where the Green Light Shines
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Product details
- ISBN 9781517915810
- Weight: 340g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 15 Jun 2026
- Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
A unique glimpse into the world of arctic canoeing through the travels of one of North America's most renowned paddlers
A centuries-long story of adventure runs through the Boundary Waters. Stretching from northern Minnesota into the Canadian Shield, this lake-dappled expanse – long an Indigenous homeland and later also a fur trading hub – is the most visited designated wilderness in North America, with more than 200,000 people dipping their paddles into its ancient waterways each year. Bridging the legendary arctic expeditions of the nineteenth century and the making of today's recreational paddling tradition, Where the Green Light Shines is a fascinating chronicle of canoe exploration, told through the journeys of a true master of the craft, Bob O'Hara.
O'Hara first launched his canoe as a Boy Scout in the 1950s, and he spent every summer for the next sixty-five years venturing further north into the Canadian barrens, a region rarely seen by paddlers. Mentored by a generation of adventurers and by the Inuit who long paddled the northern tundra rivers, O'Hara would become a guiding light for many young canoeists. Passionate yet guarded, O'Hara dedicated his life to the thrill of paddling, and his extraordinary journeys here become a touchstone as Ryan Rodgers tells the story of a nascent canoeing scene that continues to thrive today.
A vivid depiction of the northern wilds traversed by an eclectic roster of paddlers, bush pilots, and historic characters, Where the Green Light Shines illuminates a lost world of arctic canoeing remade in our time. It is bound to transport anyone interested in outdoor adventure—from wilderness canoeists to armchair travelers—and to bring home the eternal allure of the far north.
Ryan Rodgers is a freelance writer, a frequent paddler, and author of Winter's Children: A Celebration of Nordic Skiing, also published by the University of Minnesota Press. He is a regular contributor to several regional publications and lives with his family in Duluth, Minnesota.
