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The Road Washes Out in Spring: A Poet's Memoir of Living Off the Grid
 
 
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The Road Washes Out in Spring: A Poet's Memoir of Living Off the Grid [Hardcover]

Baron Wormser (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 31, 2006
For nearly twenty-five years, poet Baron Wormser and his family lived in a house in Maine with no electricity or running water. They grew much of their own food, carried water by hand, and read by the light of kerosene lamps. They considered themselves part of the "back to the land" movement, but their choice to live off the grid was neither statement nor protest: they simply had built their house too far from the road and could not afford to bring in power lines. Over the years, they settled in to a life that centered on what Thoreau called "the essential facts."

In this graceful meditation, Wormser similarly spurns ideology in favor of observation, exploration, and reflection. "When we look for one thread of motive," he writes, "we are, in all likelihood, deceiving ourselves." His refusal to be satisfied with the obvious explanation, the single thread of motive, makes him a keen and sympathetic observer of his neighbors and community, a perceptive reader of poetry and literature, and an honest and unselfconscious analyst of his own responses to the natural world. The result is a series of candid personal essays on community and isolation, nature, civilization, and poetry.

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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Former Maine poet laureate Wormser reveals the life he and his family enjoyed living "off the grid" for 20 years in this charming memoir. They decided to forego electricity and running water both for economic reasons and due to the determination to live deeply connected to the land. Wormser spares his readers any well-worn rants about "back to nature" lifestyles and instead recounts their early failures and successes ("I didn't know there was such a thing as a chainsaw until I moved to rural Maine"). With a day job as a librarian, Wormser found himself returning to poetry and achieving literary success. His ruminations on crafting poems and thoughtful considerations of the value of literature will be of great interest to readers and fellow writers. Wormser counters any comparisons to Thoreau and, in fact, has a far greater sense of humor than the iconic backwoodsman, but his endearing memoir about living simply yet richly in woods he clearly loves certainly does extend the tradition Thoreau exemplifies. Colleen Mondor
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review

"All in all, this is the best book about rural New England life since Jane Brox's Here and Nowhere Else. Its scope is narrow, but its reach is vast. Its short but wide-ranging essays seem like the dozens of jars of canned tomatoes Wormser and his wife put up each year to provide the base of their winter meals, each one carefully, thoughtfully, and lovingly prepared. The order in which they are taken off the shelves does not really matter, but it is evident that each is part of the same impulse of mind and heart and body, and each in return nourishes all three. As such, the book asks to be read slowly, savored, because, as Wormser says of the entire enterprise of living off-grid, 'There was no sum. Only infinite entries.'"--Robert Finch, Boston Globe

"His ruminations on crafting poems and thoughtful considerations of the value of literature will be of great interest to readers and fellow writers. Wormser counters any comparisons to Thoreau, and, in fact, has a far greater sense of humor than the iconic backwoodsmen, but his endearing memoir about living simply, yet richly, in woods he clearly loves certainly does extend the tradition Thoreau exemplifies."--Booklist

"What separates this memoir from the often cliched back-to-the-land life story is that the author's choices are always seen through the lens of language, especially poetry. As he describes the characters who reside in his small community in Maine, the demands of keeping up with kerosene lamps and wild gardens, the dashed hopes for the community library lost to fire, the wear and tear of time, roads, wells, and woods--he never loses the context of literary history. Wormser's authorial consciousness is permeated with Frost, Keats, Shelley, and the force of Romanticism--the individual's journey toward and examination of what life ought to be in light of what is."--ForeWord

"Intelligent and engaging, following no chronology, [The Road Washes Out in Spring rambles and wanders its way in an almost Byronic fashion, slowly and modestly revealing the making of a poet."--Down East

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 199 pages
  • Publisher: University Press of New England (October 31, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1584656077
  • ISBN-13: 978-1584656074
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.2 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #218,328 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Hard Read, June 4, 2009
I thought this was a very hard read, author kept veering off the subject matter and writing page after page about something else i.e. poetry, trees, etc. I was hoping to read about everyday life in the backwoods of Maine and the hardships as well as the rewards of doing so. The title info was sparce and rare throughout the book. Too many long complicated unfamiliar words, Very disapointing.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Addressing Thoreau as Mentor and Peer, January 18, 2011
By 
J. Schley (South Strafford, VT United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
In the old and idiosyncratic genre of wilderness literature, our American masterpiece is Thoreau's Walden: Or, Life in the Woods.

As with many perennially great books, when people overcome its daunting aura of "edifice" to actually read Walden, they often find the experience fabulously enjoyable. Thoreau combined exceptional poetic resourcefulness with astute political convictions and a seasoned gift for precise ecological detail. His writing also pulses with wit and resonant metaphor.

Contemporary Maine poet Baron Wormser has now published a book that re-approaches the concerns of Walden not in a scholarly fashion but first-hand, testing and weighing the immediate and practical utility of a life in the woods and addressing Thoreau not as a lofty intellectual forebear but as mentor and even peer.

While not a "memoir" really, as the term is mostly used today, Wormser's book is also not a how-to manual. The Road Washes Out in Spring is a marvelously sensual evocation of the motives and means of one family who took Thoreau's challenge to heart and spent a couple of decades living at the end of the road, foregoing conveniences such as electricity and harvesting much of their own food and fuel from the land right at hand.

Like the ancient Chinese sages Li Po and Wang Wei in intentional exile from the metropolis, Thoreau turned away from "normal" career and family expectations to perch at the margin of his society, from there turning back to scrutinize, contemplate, and speculate. Not "retreating" but shifting vantage points, the poet-exile seeks to see worldly reality and possibility with a fresh acuity impossible amid the mercantile hubbub and courtly intrigues of the city.

Wormser's book has three themes, entwined -- the nature of homesteading, in an era of commodity housing and "real" estate; the nature of poetry, at a time when a poet's age-old vocation as chronicling bard and shaman seems effaced by self-help frenzies and obsession with celebrities; and the nature of spiritual discipline, where the other two themes are combined, and where the joys and challenges of disciplined meditation are explored as manifestations of home-making and poetic artistry.

Characteristically, Wormser torques the "back-to-the-land" cliché -- and the perplexity of urban or suburban relations and friends -- by describing his family's Maine home not as in the middle of nowhere but "in the middle of Elsewhere." This is surely a poet's book. His vocabulary can be delightfully erudite and still entirely natural-sounding, and his prose is muscular yet always conversational, loping in gait while assiduously probing. He writes with special alacrity of neighbors, woodstoves, splitting mauls, outhouses, and the vagaries of weather across the day and night sky.

On the original title page of Walden the author declaimed, "I do not propose to write an ode to dejection, but to brag as lustily as chanticleer in the morning, standing on his roost, if only to wake my neighbors up."

In tone and tempo, Wormser is more akin to owl than rooster. With less bravado and ferocity than Thoreau, but with comparable subtlety and ardor, Baron Wormser has written a beautiful and eloquent reprise to Walden, entirely contemporary and likely to powerfully beguile readers who live in the north woods but also those who decidedly do not, like a friend of mine -- a poet and professional exterminator from Jersey City -- who told me that The Road Washes Out in Spring is the best book he's read in years.
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5.0 out of 5 stars The Road Washes Out..., September 29, 2008
By 
samm bucus (wisconsin, korea, new zealand) - See all my reviews
This is a great book. Not a how to at all (better than any how-to book on the subject I have read though, a motivating account of how-did), but a thoughtful collection of reflections about family life, rural off the grid living, poetry, country neighbors and the nearby small rural town's life. A litle 70's and 80's era stemming from back-to-the-land out of the sixties style versus "modern" cob/strawbale, solar, energy efficiency, etc sustainability, but shows how simple it can be, how enjoyable too and really just encourages you to go do it. The refelctions on their local nature and our modern culture are timeless and pertinent. The topics cover city hippies getting helped out building the house, the virtues of an outhouse and no electricity, rural small town economy, stoic resourceful rural neighbors, national politics, wells/water supply, and of course their exciting driveway. A really fabulous book, I highly recommend it.
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