From the wilderness of Alaska, Scannell has brought back a portrait of a place where  despair and hope are cinched tightly together and held fast, like these last buildings  cabled to cliffs, poised on the brink of oblivion.’ Tom Kizzia, ‘New Yorker’ Magazine  Journalist and Author 


'Paul Scannell's book is the finest collection of travel photography I have seen for a  while. This is much more than ruin porn. I defy anyone to view these images without  being moved by the travails of those who tried and failed to tame the Alaskan  wilderness.’ - Peter Carty, ‘Guardian’ contributor and travel writer 


‘Paul Scannell's images reflect a haunting empathy for those Herculean efforts left  abandoned in Alaska; our Last Frontier. In these photos, what could be simply seen  as derelict is instead revealed as an heroic effort - a statement to man's exploratory  spirit’ – Neil Darish, Lead Star of Discovery Channel’s ‘Edge of Alaska’ 

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McCarthy, Alaska, is a shell of a place. Located in the Valdez-Cordova census area, about 300 miles east of Anchorage, it is a ghost town, with a meager population of 28. Wooden structures, now worn into dilapidated ruins by time and the elements, are backdropped by looming, snow-capped mountain peaks. They remain as testaments to the town’s frontier glory days a century ago. When Dublin-born photographer Paul Scannell journeyed to Alaska from London in 2016, he didn’t expect to end up in McCarthy and nearby Kennecott.