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Three Against The Wilderness: The Amazing True Story of a Modern Pioneer Family and the Miracle They Wrought in the Barren Northern Wilderness
 
 
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Three Against The Wilderness: The Amazing True Story of a Modern Pioneer Family and the Miracle They Wrought in the Barren Northern Wilderness [Hardcover]

Eric Collier (Author)
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)


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Book Description

1959

Eric Collier's riveting recollections about the 26 years that he, his wife Lillian and son Veasy spent homesteading in the isolated Chilcotin wilderness made for an international bestseller and one of the most famous books ever written about British Columbia.

In the early 1930s, Collier and his family moved to Meldrum Creek, where the couple built their own log house and learned to live off the land. Fulfilling a promise to Lillian's grandmother to bring the beavers back to the area she knew as a child before the White man came, Collier was instrumental in the species' survival. Collier's timeless tales about roughing it in the bush and the resourcefulness inspired by this lifestyle's challenges will engage readers young and old.

--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Wilderness guide, trapper and conservationist Eric Collier was born in England in 1903. He was sent to Canada to work as a mud pup for his uncle, Harry Marriott, the author of Cariboo Cowboy. Collier died at Riske Creek, B.C., in 1966. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 349 pages
  • Publisher: Dutton; 1st edition (1959)
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B0006AW232
  • Product Dimensions: 7 x 4 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #667,351 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A MUST for any nature lover., June 30, 2003
By 
There was a time when, I think, every public and every school library stocked at least one copy each of Three Against The Wilderness, Go North Young Man, and Crusoe of Lonesome Lake. That was before video games and role playing captured our youth's attention. Now, all three are quickly disappearing from our libraries.

Three Against is a heart-warming story of one Britisher finding himself in a remote area of Canada's British Columbia. In a search for a life he could enjoy among nature, he finds a badly damaged remote tract of land and decides to make a life for himself and his new wife (Native American) by restoring nature's grandeur by introducing beaver.

The story is one of courage and sacrifice and helps explain not only the early days of conservation but of how one man could make a difference in his environment by acting locally. Margaret Meade would have been proud as punch.

After you read this book, read Go North Young Man by Gordon Stoddard, and Crusoe of Lonesome Lake. You will probably do as I and keep a copy for reading every couple of years to remind yourself you can dream, you can improve your world, and you can enjoy living without too greatly harming the environment - C. William Anderson.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent autobiography of a 'poineering' family - a modern classic, October 15, 2005
By 
Keith Joseph (West Berkshire, England) - See all my reviews
One of the most famous books about Canadian province British Columbia, Eric Collier's gripping Chilcotin memoir `Three Against the Wilderness' (1959) is a classic homesteading account. Born in Northampton, England in 1903, Eric married a girl of Indian descent, Lillian Ross, in 1928. Two years later, in spite of his wife's hip deformity due to a childhood accident, the couple took a wagon, three horses and their 18-month-old son Veasy, along with a tent, some provisions and $33, and reached the Stack Valley where they lived in an abandoned cabin. In a few years they relocated to Meldrum Creek, ten miles away, where they lived in a tent and built their own cabin. He and his wife Lillian had promised her 97-year-old grandmother, LaLa, to bring the beavers back to the area that she knew as a child before the white man came. Collier imported several pair of beaver, and raised the area's water table sufficiently to reinstate the beaver population. He encouraged more humane trapping methods and increasingly turned his hand to writing. In 1949 he was the first non-American to win Outdoor Life's Conservation Award and in the 1950s the staff at Outdoor Life encouraged him to consider writing a book about his experiences as a pioneering conservationist and trapper. Written by longhand and then transcribed onto his Remington typewriter, Collier's recollections of 26 years of family life and 'roughing it in the bush' for Three Against the Wilderness (1959) were a hit, and soon condensed by Reader's Digest and re-sold in at least seven translations around the world. See abcbookworld for more details of this and other books related to British Columbia.

Soft-spoken and usually unassuming, Eric Collier moved his family to Riske Creek in 1960. He sold his 38-mile trapline on March 26, 1964 for $2,500. He died at Riske Creek on March 15, 1966. Collier's wife and trapping partner Lily moved to Williams Lake and died in 1992. Their son Veasy, schooled by correspondence, served in the Korean War, married Judy Borkowski, and settled at Williams Lake. Erected in 1946, the Collier's much-deteriorated, second, four-room log home at Meldrum Creek was slated for demolition in 1989, under the auspices of the Chilcotin Military Reserve north of Riske Creek, but local protests in Cariboo encouraged Captain Paul Davies and the Canadian Army Engineers to resurrect the remote dwelling and its log barn with new roofing, shakes, doors and windows. A very rough road leads 40 kilometres off Highway 20 to the site--one of the few literary historical sites that have been preserved in British Columbia.

I read a `Companion Book Club' version of this book as a boy (about 11) and loved it. It must have been condensed though, so I would recommend an original 1959 to 1960 hardback. Amazon resellers often have them for sale (mine was published by Hutchinson, London around 1960). They aren't expensive (a fiver or so) and have piccies of the log cabins, the family and local moose. The book has 270 pages of (quite small) text. I loved this book as a kid back in the sixties, it opened a window on another world. The book was lying about as part of my fathers 'bookclub' selections, but went missing years ago. I've since purchased a better 2nd hand copy from Amazon for a few dollars. The Collier's story would actually make quite a good film, and its very sad that the book is now virtually unknown to the younger generation.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Three Against the Wilderness is a lifetime memory, February 6, 2003
My first contact with this story began in 1959 when my mother read the condensed book section in the Readers Digest to me and to two other small boys from up the road. She said that we sat spellbound. It was a good story then; it has been each of the multiple times that I've read it. The story is of a man whose father wanted him to be a lawyer in England but who came to B.C. in about 1921 and ended up on 150,000 acre registered trap line ---to which he reintroduced the beaver. It is an intensly personal and heartwarming story of a family as it faced the wilderness into which they had come. The world of ecology today needs to remember that there were those who took serious the simultanous protection and the use of the environment before today's jealots were born.
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