Tom McGuire came to Alaska with two college friends. Fifty years later, he still hasn’t found reason to leave. He has worked as a salmon fisherman, carpenter, and North Slope oilfield worker. He and his wife have raised four children in a house they built on the banks of the Chilkoot River. Grizzly bears are frequent visitors. Tom has also paddled thousands of miles down (and up) northern rivers. He has published a book, 99 Days on the Yukon, that describes a summer-long trip with legendary canoeist Charlie Wolf.
""Overall, McGuire's writing is as precise and lyrical as any of our best contemporary novelists. It's also consistently knowing and intelligent about technologies, geography and the natural world, the motives and desires of human beinds, and even literary and cultural references. [...] McGuire's depictions of Southeast Alaska, the world of commercial fishing and human behaviors are perfectly rendered, page after page."" —Anchorage Daily News Featured in the Shelf Unbound list of 2024 Indie Summer Reads ""In The Curve of Equal Time, Thomas McGuire accomplishes something remarkable: a taut page-turner with an authentic Alaskan voice. He captures the transience and connection of people engaged in the Alaska fisheries with rich, lived-in detail while spinning a plot that ensnares the reader as surely as the salmon caught in the seines he vividly describes. A masterful work of fiction that ripples in the mind long after the last chapter."" —Zachary Falcon, author Cabin, Clearing, Forest ""McGuire’s fast-moving crime read evokes a desperate but colorful way of life in Alaska’s southeast fishing communities. The story’s vivid sounds, smells, and characters linger long after the last page."" —Jessica Cherry, co-editor Wheels on Ice: Stories of Cycling in Alaska