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Barefoot-Hearted : A Wild Life Among Wildlife [Bargain Price] [Hardcover]

Kathleen Meyer (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Hardcover, Bargain Price, August 14, 2001 --  

Book Description

August 14, 2001
"The Wyoming Centennial Wagon Train ended in Cody in a dismal, torn-down drive-in movie theater. Before setting up the corral, we were forced to clear away shards of glass, bent nails, broken lumber. My prairie skirt and petticoats hung ragged and clay-caked, and under a droopy Stetson my frizzled hair appeared at once greased and starched beyond human recognition. A cloud, a sort of vaporousness, redolent with fresh acrid sweat on top of powerful stale sweat, hung thickly about me. Laced, as it was, with a woman's sweet musky secretions, and all gone past ripe, oddly it was a pungency I savored. Such goaty piquance, though, was cause to be shunned in any town setting.

The look of my world had changed. Gone were the high-dollar designer clothes and the zipping around fabled Marin County in a candy-apple-red 1966 Mustang convertible. It was true that I unfailingly sought the ironies in life and, with a kind of dual personality, shifted easily through incongruencies such as town strolls in high heels and backcountry hiking in bare feet; the bucket seats of a classic automobile and the broken-down bench of a beater truck. It was only during the years that Iíd worn white overalls, taped drywall, and come home every night much like Charles Schulz's Pig Pen, flaking a cloud of dried white mud bits onto the rug, that I'd felt moved to keep my fingernails painted red. Now I was to slip farther than ever planned toward one end of my seesaw and then, incredibly, by conscious design, inch out even farther."
--from Barefoot-Hearted

With more than 1.5 million copies in print, Kathleen Meyer's groundbreaking international bestseller, How to Shit in the Woods: An Environmentally Sound Approach to a Lost Art, has been widely embraced by the outdoor community and has found its way into myriad places: national parks, outdoor leadership schools and scout-troop headquarters, the camp tents of those who have discovered that it is amusing out-loud reading, and the bathroom-literature baskets of households around the world.

Now, from the Rocky Mountain West, Meyer brings us Barefoot-Hearted: A Wild Life Among Wildlife, a coming-into-the-country story told with the frank, dry humor and sharp research of her first book. The country, in this case, is Montana's tall, reaching landscape with its ever underfoot wild critters; the on-tenterhooks territory of a new romantic relationship; and the pressure cooker that is our precarious global imbalance. Meyer finds herself in midlife standing out under yawning skies, surrounded by sagebrush and cactus, having fallen for the Irish charm of itinerant farrier Patrick McCarron. As partners, they travel across three mountain states with draft horses and a covered wagon and then set up housekeeping in a seventy-five-year-old dairy barn.

In this primitive structure, the author rapidly discovers she's living with troops of mice, a nursery colony of seventy-five bats, sexually fired-up skunks, and more flies than in a pig shed. She tells of a freakish season that or-phaned seventy-seven bear cubs, an unusual fly-fishing trip on a famed blue-ribbon trout stream, the visitations of moose, and the discovery of a den of wolves.

Meyer's prose is original and inspired, playful yet provocative. She carries us vividly back to the settlers' old West while pondering modern-day dilemmas, those of fitting into this fast hurtling world, of determining amid the earth's rising extinctions of species, whose planet it is, and of managing to stay empowered residing with a man who "stands six feet six and beats steel on an anvil for a living." A personal chronicle of conscience and a love story of rare and quirky dimension, Barefoot-Hearted catapults readers into new realms of thought, deftly guided there by Meyer's sense of the ironic, the randy, and the humorous.
--This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Memoirs by urbanites who homestead in the country and learn hard lessons in the bargain are many, but few attain the depths of a Walden or Pilgrim at Tinker Creek. Readers of those books will want to spend time with Kathleen Meyer's sometimes playful, sometimes somber Barefoot Hearted, which brings a resolutely modern sensibility to some ancient problems--among them, how to live with the creatures on whose homes humans have intruded, and how to learn the arts of self-sufficiency.

Meyer, the author of the indelicately titled but highly useful How to Shit in the Woods, recounts how she and her partner set about making an old Montana barn into a fit home. The job was daunting, she learned: in winter, the place was so cold that she had to bundle up in gear befitting an Antarctic explorer, no easy garb for, well, performing certain functions. And, she found, the barn and its environs had become a shelter for many animals, some of which she welcomed (among them bats and, strangely, skunks), some of which she reluctantly waged war against (specifically a never-ending army of mice). She sets those challenges against a thoughtful, ongoing discussion that touches upon important philosophical issues: the responsibilities of those who live on the edges where civilization and wilderness meet, and the responsibilities of humans to preserve what little of wild nature is left in a time of wholesale extinction and slaughter.

Wise, literate, and often moving, Meyer's memoir is required reading for anyone contemplating a move to places beyond the avenue--and for anyone who values a good story well told. --Gregory McNamee --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

From Publishers Weekly

Meyer (author of the unlikely international bestseller How to Shit in the Woods) offers a thoughtful and irreverent account of her life cohabitating with bats, skunks, mice and an Irish gypsy horseshoer named Patrick McCarron, in a 75-year-old dairy barn in Montana's rural Bitterroot Valley. Meyer describes the couple's struggles to balance the needs of the natural world with their own, recounting many amusing anecdotes to support her contention that "the person passionate to live gently, with cheek and ear to the ground, is mightily challenged to figure out how." For instance, efforts to control deer mice and cluster flies, both of which threaten to overrun her barn, lead to questions of the power that "ordinary, all-powerful Homo sapiens" have to determine which species will survive. The couple learns to adapt to such unusual circumstances as baby bats dive-bombing them at night and skunks spraying the barn during their mating season. Meyer also helps care for bears driven from their habitat by sprawling towns and lack of food, and reflects on the decline of native trout populations. Drawing on interviews with local naturalists and scientists, including well-known writer David Quammen (Song of the Dodo), she provides a wealth of information about each species, though at times gets bogged down in unnecessary detail. Although mostly focused on environmental concerns, Meyer's loosely structured account does include personal elements, including frequent references to Patrick and an account of their empowering journey across the Continental Divide via covered wagon, yielding a compelling portrait of a life lived close to nature.
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 368 pages
  • ISBN-10: 0375504389
  • ASIN: B000FUO0H4
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 5.7 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,437,978 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The adventurer I wanted to be., March 1, 2009
By 
L. Klein "too many books, too little time" (Cookeville, Tennessee United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Barefoot-Hearted : A Wild Life Among Wildlife (Hardcover)
I really enjoyed this book. She did a number of things I always wanted to do, but "the real world" prevented it. (Raised a large family alone, etc.) I think the feeling I got was of someone who could look after herself, and was a "helper" as well as a "helpee",. Independent, but still able to love and give to someone else.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Great back-to-nature read!, August 19, 2010
This review is from: Barefoot-Hearted : A Wild Life Among Wildlife (Hardcover)
A fun and funny book to read if you ever dabbled in the countercultural "back-to-nature movement" of the '70's or the looked ahead to the coming "social collapse" the in '20s as a survivalist determined to live off the land without destroying the rest of it. And a love story to boot. Thought provoking read.
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