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National Geographic has been called a window on the world and a passport to adventure. Each month an estimated forty million people in 190 countries open its pages and are transported to exotic realms that delight the eye and mind. Such widespread renown gives the magazine's writers an almost magical access to people and happenings, as doors that are closed to the rest of the journalistic world open wide.Thomas Y. Canby was fortunate to be a Geographic writer and science editor from 1961 to 1991, a time during which the Society's ventures and size grew by leaps and bounds and the resources available to staff were seemingly limitless. In From Botswana to the Bering Sea, he gives readers an on-the-ground look at the life of a National Geographic field staffer and an insider's view of the fascinating dynamics within the magazine's editorial chambers.Canby's assignments dealt largely with issues of global concern, and his travels took him to the farthest reaches of the planet. This book gives the reader the visas and tickets to share in Canby's experiences-from a Filipino rice harvest capped by a feast of deep-fried rats, to impoverished villages of Asia and Africa gripped by the world's most widespread famine, to seal hunting and dog sledding with Eskimos in the Canadian high Arctic. Readers match wits with paranoid guardians of the secret Soviet space program; skirt land mines in the flaming oil fields of Kuwait; and dodge death while scuba diving to an archaeological site in a Florida sinkhole. The book also gives insight into the magazine's inner workings: how article subjects are chosen; how writers are assigned and interact; how prolonged trips to impossibly remote destinations are planned; how staffers operate in the field.Working for National Geographic has been called "the best job in the world." From Botswana to the Bering Sea describes that unique job, and answers from first-hand knowledge the question Canby and his colleagues are so often asked: "So, what is it like to work for National Geographic?"
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A S H E A RWAT E R B O O K Also by Thomas Y. Canby LEGENDS OF THE WEST OUR CHANGING EARTH WONDROUS WORLD OF FISHES FROM BOTSWANA TO THE BERING SEA FROM BOTSWANA TO THE BERING SEA My Thirty Years with National Geographic Thomas Y. Canby ISLAND PRESS / Shearwater Books Washington, D.C. • Covelo, California A Shearwater Book published by Island Press Copyright © 1998 Island Press All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the publisher: Island Press, 1718 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., Suite 300, Washington, DC 20009. Shearwater is a trademark of The Center for Resource Economics. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA Canby, Thomas Y. From Botswana to the Bering sea : my thirty years with National Geographic / by Thomas Y. Canby. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 1-55963-517-7 1. Canby, Thomas Y. 2. National geographic—History. 3. Geography—Field work. 4. Science writers—United States-Biography. 5. Periodical editors—United States—Biography. I. Title. G69.C28A3 1998 98-5968 910’ .5—dc21 CIP Printed on recycled, acid-free paper Manufactured in the United States of America 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 To Susan Contents Preface xi Chapter 1. INSIDE YELLOW BORDER THE 1 Chapter 2. RAT PATROL 15 Chapter 3. AT LARGE IN I NUIT LAND 45 BAY 65 Chapter 4. HOLDING FAMINE AT Chapter 5. THE MYSTERY OF THE FIRST AMERICANS Chapter 6. ˜ ’S TANTRUM EL NI NO