Once upon a time, the Mississippi River hosted one of the gnarliest canoe races anywhere. It was called the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby, an annual 450-mile race on the Upper Mississippi in the 1940s and 1950s. This massive river competition changed the course of modern canoeing, and a new book reveals the lost history of its impact on water sports.
In Pushing the River: An Epic Battle, a Lost History, a Near Death, and Other True Canoeing Stories, award-winning writer Frank Bures takes a deep dive into canoe adventure. Recounting the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby remains the “heart of the book,” but the non-fiction anthology offers many other stories as well.
You’ll read about the “terror” of two kayakers who barely escaped the 2011 Pagami Creek Fire in the Boundary Waters. Then there’s the spooky tale of two young campers who experienced a supernatural scare in Canada’s Quetico Provincial Park in the 1970s. Bures even shares a story from his own life on the river, with a miraculous rescue that shows what happens “when you push the river.”
With the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby, Bures delves into the forgotten contributions of the Leech Lake Indian Reservation, who long dominated the race. In the excerpt below, you’ll also learn about the unacknowledged influence of Ojibwe canoe builders Jim and Bernie Smith.

A Race and a Rescue in 1949

‘These Guys Are My Friends’

Race History
Pain, Heroism, and Brilliance
