黑料百科

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Reading to Feature Author, Salmon Fisher

Author Leslie Leyland Fields
Author Leslie Leyland Fields

Leslie Leyland Fields, an author, editor, speaker and an active participant in her family鈥檚 salmon fishing business in Kodiak, Alaska, speaks Tuesday, Oct. 25, at 7 p.m. in 黑料百科鈥檚 Hieronymus Lounge at Kerrwood Hall. The lecture, sponsored by the English Department and Gender Studies Program, is free and open to the public. She will be reading from her most recent essay, 鈥淥ne Skiff, Two Women, Wild Ocean: A Life in Alaska.鈥

鈥淪he embodies a fascinating multitude of roles: a brilliant writer, salmon fisher, mother, active editor and teacher,鈥 says Cheri Larsen Hoeckley, professor of English.

Fields, a mother of six, and her husband, Duncan, live on an uninhabited island, 80 miles from the town of Kodiak. They have fished commercially with extended family on Harvester Island each summer since 1979 in a salmon-fishing operation. During the winter, Leslie teaches in Seattle Pacific University鈥檚 Master of Fine Arts program.

Fields has written several books, including 鈥淭he Entangling Net: Alaska鈥檚 Commercial Fishing Women Tell Their Lives,鈥 鈥淥ut on the Deep Blue: Women, Men and the Oceans They Fish,鈥 鈥淪urprise Child,鈥 鈥淪urviving the Island of Grace鈥 and 鈥淭he Water Under Fish.鈥 Her essays and poetry have appeared in The Atlantic, Beliefnet, Christian Science Monitor, Christianity Today and the Seattle Review.

Fields graduated from Cedarville University, earned master鈥檚 degrees in journalism and English at the University of Oregon and a Master of Fine Arts degree from Goddard College.