You might want to share this event with your patrons as we explore the wild path of the development of transportation that led to today's snowmobiles we all take for granted. At least I did, growing up as a kid in the late 1960s, I assumed that snowmobiles had been around forever!
All are welcome and the event is free to everyone in Michigan, regardless of which peninsula you live in.

When: Thursday,
December 11, 2025 at 7 pm Eastern / 6 pm Central
Where: on the Zoom platform
-- please contact Evelyn Gathu in advance at egathu@crystalfallslibrary.org,
or by phone at (906) 875-3344. We recommend you borrow a copy of
these books from your local library or purchase them from your
local bookseller in advance to get the most out of these events.
LARRY
JORGENSEN first became addicted to the
sport and business of snowmobiling after buying his first sled, an
Arctic Cat, in 1967. He purchased that Cat from the first Arctic
Cat dealer in Green Bay, a local shoe repair shop which had a
total available inventory of two machines. Jorgensen was fortunate
to become a riding member of the pioneer cross-country snowmobile
group, the Peninsula Pathfinders of Upper Michigan. He
participated in the club's first three long-distance rides,
including the 1970 trip across the giant Mackinac Bridge which
connects lower Michigan to the Upper Peninsula. Although he owned
the Arctic Cat, he had been convinced to ride an Eskimo
snowmobileand it may have been the only time an Eskimo sled
crossed the Big Mac.
"I
will blend in this review of Make
It Go In the Snow ideas and effects that I have come across
in my general reading on surrealism among the modern French poets
in order to capture the skill and overall effects in Jorgensen
because I think his work is a fine addition to the detail and to
the mood of talking about the culture of the UP. He does not tell
his history in a systematic way with footnotes and large
bibliography like an academic. Instead, he uses many old
photographs and rather rambles through his story in a leisurely
way like a Parisian flâneur or gentleman expert on the
feature of being a Yooper man of the North. It reminds me of my
own immersion when my wife and I began our discovery of the
region; and even though it was usually summer
I
was fascinated with the exploration of the Antarctic, of “Going
South” across rough seas from New Zealand with the sad and heroic
Captain Scott and his brave men and dogs. A news reporter for a TV
station in Green Bay, Jorgensen first became addicted to the sport
and business of snowmobiling when he bought his first sled, an
Arctic Cat in 1967. Pictured
at right is
Admiral Byrd's ill-fated Snow Cruiser trekking across the USA
toward it's launch from the east coast." -- Mack Hassler, UP
Book Review
More information about the U.P. Notable Book list, U.P. Book Review, and UPPAA can be found on www.UPNotable.com
Established in 1998 to support authors and publishers who live in or write about Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, UPPAA is a Michigan nonprofit association with over 180 members, many of whose books are featured on the organization’s website at www.uppaa.org. UPPAA welcomes membership and participation from anyone with a UP connection who is interested in writing.
-- Regards, Victor R. Volkman, President L H Press Inc. www.LHPress.com