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In the boomtowns of the Alaska-Yukon stampedes, where gold dust was common currency, the rarest commodity was an attractive woman, and her company could be costly. Author Lael Morgan takes you into the heart of the gold rush demimonde, that "half world" of prostitutes, dance hall girls, and entertainers who lived on the outskirts of polite society. Meet "Dutch Kate" Wilson, who pioneered many areas long before the "respectable" women who received credit for getting there first ... ruthless heartbreakers Cad Wilson and Rose Blumkin ... "French" Marie Larose, who auctioned herself off as a wife…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
In the boomtowns of the Alaska-Yukon stampedes, where gold dust was common currency, the rarest commodity was an attractive woman, and her company could be costly. Author Lael Morgan takes you into the heart of the gold rush demimonde, that "half world" of prostitutes, dance hall girls, and entertainers who lived on the outskirts of polite society. Meet "Dutch Kate" Wilson, who pioneered many areas long before the "respectable" women who received credit for getting there first ... ruthless heartbreakers Cad Wilson and Rose Blumkin ... "French" Marie Larose, who auctioned herself off as a wife to the highest bidder, Georgia Lee, who invested her earnings wisely and became one of the richest women in the North, and Edith Neile, called "the Oregon Mare," famous for both her outlandish behavior and her softhearted generosity.


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Autorenporträt
Lael Morgan was born in rural Maine, got her educational start in a two-room schoolhouse in East Vassalboro, and went on to become a drama major at Emerson College with no plans acquire a degree. In 1957 she transferred to Boston University School of Public Relations and Communications, while working a six-day week as a hotel night clerk with a double shift on Saturdays. She graduated cum laude in the summer of 1959 and traveled with her husband, Dodge, to Anchorage, Alaska, where she worked for an advertising agency. In 1963 the Morgans sailed half way around the world in a 36' schooner. On return in 1965, Lael moved back to Alaska while her husband pursued work on the east coast. They divorced in 1971 but remained on excellent terms.

Morgan stared her journalistic career as a writer for the Malden Press in 1958. Later she became a photojournalist at the Juneau Alaska Empire in Alaska's capitol city, and then covered crime and politics for the Fairbanks News Miner just south of the Arctic Circle. In 1969 she signed on as a reporter/photographer on to the Los Angeles Times where in 1970 she won the Photographer of the Year award for best photo feature. The award of an Alicia Patterson fellowship and a Rockefeller Foundation grant in 1972 helped her establish a national reputation reporting on Native Americans.

Lael Morgan at Anatuvak Pass, AlaskaMorgan subsequently embarked on a freelance career working for Alaska Northwest Publishing, the Washington Post, New York Times, Christian Science Monitor, and National Geographic Magazine. From 1974 to 1987 she served as roving reporter for Alaska Northwest Publishing which assigned her to visit every Alaska village named in the Alaska Native Land Claims Settlement. Of the 220 that qualified she visited all but 13.
In 1988 Morgan won her master's degree from Boston University with a focus on publishing. Then, in 1988 with a partner Kent Sturgis, she established Epicenter Press, a regional house that now the major publisher of Alaska titles with has more than 100 books to its credit. That same year she joined the Department of Journalism and Broadcasting, University of Alaska Fairbanks, where she taught writing, photography, and multimedia.

In 1999, after serving three years as department chair, and winning a Fulbright to Fiji, Morgan returned to her native state to become managing editor of the Casco Bay Weekly, an alternative newspaper in Portland, Maine, owned by her form...