A North Country Life: Tales of Woodsmen, Waters, and Wildlife

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Product Details

Price
$24.95
Publisher
Skyhorse Publishing
Publish Date
Pages
224
Dimensions
6.36 X 9.29 X 0.8 inches | 0.01 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781616088637
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author

SYDNEY LEA is a poet, essayist, and novelist whose many works include Young of the Year and A Little Wildness: Some Notes on Rambling. He was founder and long time editor of the New England Review. In 2011 he was named the Poet Laureate of Vermont.
Nick Lyons is a former English professor and book publisher, as well as the author and editor of many books on various topics. He lives in New York City.

Reviews

Lea, Vermont's poet laureate, has crafted a series of essays on the people and places of his rural northern environment that will appeal deeply to those who love or admire New England and can appreciate the quiet life . . . The author's literary expertise shines through in a passage where bass fishing reminds him of an Elizabeth Bishop poem but as much as his essays are about quail and dogs and logging, Lea reaches beyond regionality to a purely American experience. There is a soulful quality to his words and a strong conviction that a connected life is one to be admired and emulated. A cross between Thoreau and David James Duncan, Lea is a northern treasure.-- Colleen Mondor, Booklist
Lea, Vermont s poet laureate, has crafted a series of essays on the people and places of his rural northern environment that will appeal deeply to those who love or admire New England and can appreciate the quiet life . . . The author s literary expertise shines through in a passage where bass fishing reminds him of an Elizabeth Bishop poem but as much as his essays are about quail and dogs and logging, Lea reaches beyond regionality to a purely American experience. There is a soulful quality to his words and a strong conviction that a connected life is one to be admired and emulated. A cross between Thoreau and David James Duncan, Lea is a northern treasure. Colleen Mondor, Booklist
Sydney Lea is a fisherman, a hunter, a philosopher, a trainer of bird dogs, an interpreter of the past and a collector of stories. This abundance of experience shows up to good effect. Mr. Lea draws upon his own experiences to give texture to storytelling. He writes memorably. His stories ring true. --Christopher Kimball, The Wall Street Journal

Now nearing his 70th birthday, Vermont poet laureate Lea (A Hundred Himalayas: Essays on Life and Literature, 2012, etc.) meditates on the role of people and place in his life and pays tribute to the many woodsmen (and women) who were his guides and mentors.

I ve always been intrigued by the blending of natural and human worlds or rather by the dramatic illustration of that blending, writes the author in this account of a number of the salty characters, many now deceased, who played a part in his life, many of whom he has described in previously published essays. Here, their stories help him chronicle his life and share his deep love for the northern New England woodlands and his passion for hunting and fishing. He describes with gusto his epic combats as a fly fisherman when he was a hyper-hormonal young man, and he is unapologetic about his love of hunting, which he describes as a life-long passion. Lea disparages what he describes as the rants of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, who don't understand the sacramental value of hunting, and he expresses great regard for the woodsmen who mentored him and accompanied him on his adventures. However, he is cleareyed in his appraisal of how much poverty and alcohol abuse were also a part of that bygone way of life. While he himself no longer traps animals, he pays tribute to the trappers who know things about the ways of nature that our Staples-and-Domino's culture is largely unaware of. Lea is involved in an effort to create a 1 million-acre wildlife preserve on the border between Maine and New Brunswick that will be managed according to green guidelines.

While his uncompromising views are and are intended to be provocative, the author s love of nature and his tender evocation of a way of life that is dying out has appeal.