Kaylene Johnson-Sullivan lives and writes on a small horse farm in Palmer, Alaska where she lives with her husband, horses, and dogs. She has found adventure on Denali, the Talkeetna Mountains and as a wrangler and cook in the Brooks Range. Her award-winning articles have appeared in Alaska magazine, the Los Angeles Times, the Louisville Review and other publications. Her books include:
Our Perfect Wild: Ray & Barbara Bane's Journeys and the Fate of the Far North;
Canyons and Ice: The Wilderness Travels of Dick Griffith;
A Tender Distance: Adventures Raising My Sons in Alaska;
Portrait of the Alaska Railroad; and
Trails Across Time: History of An Alaska Mountain Corridor.
She holds a BA from Vermont College and an MFA in Writing from Spalding University in Louisville, Kentucky.