Betty Lowman was a 22 year old Pamona College grad who decided to row her cedar canoe from Anacortes, Washington to Ketchikan, Alaska. The year is 1937. Betty was a large, one could say "powerful" young woman who could row for miles in Puget Sound and who would swim from Anacortes to Guemes Island for fun. To train for the trip she swam ten miles from Anacortes to Cypress Island with her dad, a fisherman, trailing her in a boat. I have mentioned before that I'm a sucker for nautical adventures and this is a good one. Betty's adventure changed her life and made her into a minor celebrity who would travel the country for several years telling of her adventures on the Inside Passage. It's a charming book on several levels. The 1937 mind set seems very naive from our point of view. At another level Betty's poor self-image as a full-figured gal becomes a sub-theme of the book. It's as if she is rowing the canoe to re-create herself. But she is constantly remarking on the svelte creatures who inhabit the pleasure craft she meets along the way or recounting insulting comments received at the hands of insensitive if well-meaning fishermen and loggers. Likewise her attraction to the many good looking men who populated British Columbia is hard for her to hide. (At one point in the book she mentions that she had never been kissed in the moonlight. Perhaps this explains all those cold, cold swims). Most surprising is the number of people Betty meets on the trip. Fishermen, loggers, government officials, sawmill employees, paper mill managers, light house keepers, housewives, tourists, natives, doctors. The Inside Passage was populated sparsely by today's measure but, still, Betty very often spent the night in shelter and occasionally in clean sheets. The radio (short wave) had made it known from Vancouver to Ketchikan that a young American woman, the coed canoeist, was making her way north. They looked for her; looked forward to her and offered amazing hospitality and assistance. The geography of the Inside Passage is very confusing with channels, bays, lagoons, reaches, inlets, rapids, island, narrows and passes. Betty helps by provided a decent map with each chapter marking her 66 days of progress. The tides and currents could be used to advantage and she was very lucky until she was swamped in a storm, lost all her equipment and her oars and was stranded for three days before paddling away using a piece of cedar bark. Helpful Canadians resupplied her and by the time Betty arrived in Ketchikan her life had changed.