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Woodsqueer

Crafting a Sustainable Life in Rural Maine

Gretchen Legler

$34.99

Paperback

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English
Trinity University Press,U.S.
24 May 2022
A spiritual connection with the land, nature, and animals (both wild and domesticated) resulting in a respectful, reverant ecology.

A queering of the traditional idealist couple's back-to-the-land narrative through lesbian eyes replete with plaid flannels and power tools.

Heightened and sustained attention to the ecology of nature (deer, other forest denizens) and agriculture (chickens, goats)

Faithful and respectful depiction of rural Maine, and northern New England (VT and HN)

Intrepid sportswoman, polar explorer, and writer Gretchen Legler tackles her greatest challenge yet - rural, self-sufficient domesticity

Cottagecore trending in popular culture

Audience, professionals in these fields: organic farming, wild foods, psychology and social work, gardening, literature, writing

General readers interested in the following: women and adventure, feminism, memoir, women's stories about place, women and farming, organic farming, gardening, lesbian life, foraging and wild foods, spiritual healing, healing fro trauma, back-to-the-land movement, homesteading, Maine, rural life, goats, raising chickens, making maple syrup, long-term lesbian relationships, LBGTQ, Cottagecore
By:  
Imprint:   Trinity University Press,U.S.
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 215mm,  Width: 139mm, 
ISBN:   9781595349590
ISBN 10:   1595349596
Pages:   288
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Gretchen Legler is the author of On the Ice: An Intimate Portrait of Life at McMurdo Station, Antarctica and All The Powerful Invisible Things: A Sportswoman's Notebook, which received two Pushcart Prizes (reissued by Trinity University Press). She is a professor of creative writing at the University of Maine at Farmington. She lives in Farmington with her partner, Ruth.

Reviews for Woodsqueer: Crafting a Sustainable Life in Rural Maine

Praise for Woodsqueer This poignant examination of the natural world and the author's unique place in it will delight readers itching to get outdoors. - Publishers Weekly At times humbling and grueling, but it is also amusing...Woodsqueer shows the value of a solitary sojourn and both the pathway to and possibilities for making a sustainable, meaningful life on the land. - Book Riot Twenty years ago, Legler moved with her partner, Ruth, into a post-and-beam Cape on 80 wooded acres in western Maine and started penning essays about the couple's experiences carving a life out of what came to be their small farm: essays on building fences, tending goats, hunting deer, cutting wood, and much more. Over time, the essays coalesced into a book that reflects on not only the joys and challenges of homesteading in rural Maine, but also on human relationships - between romantic partners, among neighbors, and more - unfolding against an agrarian backdrop. - Down East Magazine Woodsqueer is about more than just the ins and outs of sustainable farming and rural living, as the subtitle might suggest. It is underscored by the concept of connections - with nature, animals, other humans - and what it takes to build, sustain and repair these relationships. - Sun Journal Woodsqueer is used to describe the strange mindset of a person who has lived in the wild for an extended period, but it may also describe Legler and her partner. What follows is in part a predictable rural tale of chopping wood, raising chickens, and foraging for mushrooms, but it is skillfully interwoven with the dramatic personal saga of Legler's past relationships, ill-begotten love affairs, and ultimately, happy marriage to Ruth. - Minnesota Alumni Magazine Legler is a seeker. This book is more than 'a back to the land' memoir; it is a spiritual autobiography of a woman in relationship with the earth in all its power. - Terry Tempest Williams, author of The Hour of Land: A Personal Topography of America's National Parks Gretchen Legler's evocative and eloquent stories glow like a hearth. Her life in the Maine woods with the woman she loves is by turns joyous and conflicted, generous and greedy, compassionate and cruel. But the author is always honest and her prose exquisite, and the home these two women built together is one you'll want to visit again and again. - Sy Montgomery, author of The Soul of an Octopus: A Surprising Exploration into the Wonder of Consciousness In this luminous inquiry into the meaning of self-sufficiency, love, and continuance, Gretchen Legler invites us to question what we all need to feel alive to ourselves, moving beyond human connection to land, animals, and home into the wild nature of contentment itself. In Woodsqueer, Legler has crafted a morality of natural desire. - Barrie Jean Borich, author of Apocalypse, Darling With raw intimacy and astonishing attention to detail, Gretchen Legler brings what it means to live off the land into the twenty-first century. Woodsqueer is a refuge in these crazy times, a reminder that survival is hard but joyful. - Lucy Jane Bledsoe, author of Lava Falls A perfect memoir in every way . . . a deeply layered, painfully honest, and wholly gripping story. Legler keeps blazing the way toward a literature of hope. - Janisse Ray, author of Wild Spectacle: Seeking Wonders in a World beyond Humans Legler immerses us again and again in the sometimes tender, sometimes bloody experiences of life on a farm in rural Maine. Whether she's nurturing chicks, milking goats, skinning hides, or foraging in the woods, the labors involved when living intimately with the land come through in all their sweaty, sensuous, humbling pleasures. - Catherine Reid, author of The Landscapes of Anne of Green Gables Praise for All the Powerful Invisible Things Ms. Legler has written a book that is part nature guide, part family history and part feminist tract, and she captures the reader's imagination with the same skill and precision with which she catches spring walleyes on the Rainey River. - New York Times These moving essays so seamlessly connect her inner and outer selves that Legler (a creative writing teacher whose work has been anthologized elsewhere) even manages to combine such seemingly at-odds subjects as her love of and respect for animals and her love of hunting, her affection for her ex-husband and her strong sexual attraction to women, without ever sounding hypocritical or confused. Nature plays a part here, but really these are essays about emotional states, and Legler bares her heart as easily as she slits open the belly of a deer. - Publishers Weekly The awesome vision of a woman tearing herself down to the bone and then slowly, painstakingly, recreating herself in her own image...Although these essays are ostensibly distinct, together they create a sense of process that makes this book exceptional. Legler's epiphanies are book-length--and longer. What this volume evokes is beyond sympathy; the reader aches for Legler's pain. - Kirkus Reviews Praise for On the Ice The emotional honesty of Legler's reporting significantly increases our understanding of life on the last great frontier. - Publishers Weekly


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