On All Sides Nowhere: Building a Life in Rural IdahoIn the 1970s, a young man, eager to experience life like Thoreau and Walden, takes his wife and moves to a rural Idaho log cabin in this memoir. When Bill Gruber left Philadelphia for graduate school in Idaho, he and his wife decided to experience true rural living. His longing for the solitude and natural beauty that Thoreau found on Walden Pond led him to buy an abandoned log cabin and its surrounding forty acres in Alder Creek, a town considered small even by Idaho standards. But farm living was far from the bucolic wonderland he expected: he now had to rise with the sun to finish strenuous chores, cope with the lack of modern conveniences, and shed his urban pretensions to become a real local. Despite the initial hardships, he came to realize that reality was far better than his wistful fantasies. Instead of solitude, he found a warm, welcoming community; instead of rural stolidity, he found intelligence and wisdom; instead of relaxation, he found satisfaction in working the land. What began as a two-year experiment became a seven-year love affair with a town he'll always consider home. Winner of the Bakeless Prize, Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference Praise for On All Sides Nowhere “While Gruber’s writing is a gift, even better are the simple but profound truths he shares: “We sometimes forget that the most important thing we can do with our lives is to make them models for somebody else to follow.” Gruber’s Idaho is like the Troy first and famously uncovered by 19th-century German archeologist Schliemann: in actuality, there isn’t a whole lot there, but the author makes it seem full and magical, all the same.” —Publishers Weekly “What was intended to be a deep immersion in study for graduate school—in the silence and solitude of a northern Idaho backwoods cabin—becomes a deep immersion instead in a place and its people, sharply etched . . . . Engaging particulars of an essential life, pared to the core.” —Kirkus Reviews |
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... fell in love with the community of writers... All these people talking about nothing but writing, forcing me to think about writing! I aspired to this great society." My own relationship with Bread Loaf began in 1981 when I attended as ...
... fell in love with the community of writers... All these people talking about nothing but writing, forcing me to think about writing! I aspired to this great society." My own relationship with Bread Loaf began in 1981 when I attended as ...
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... fell trees, and the dangers, pleasures, and complexity of low- tech logging come sharply into focus. Essays on the chainsaw and the peculiar language of sawyers follow naturally. Something you maybe curious about —how much land isforty ...
... fell trees, and the dangers, pleasures, and complexity of low- tech logging come sharply into focus. Essays on the chainsaw and the peculiar language of sawyers follow naturally. Something you maybe curious about —how much land isforty ...
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Contents
1 On All Sides Nowhere | |
2 Things That Came with the Place
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3 Locals
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4 The White Fir
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5 Immigrants and Emigrants
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6 Falling Trees
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7 Hay for the Horses
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8 Builders Buildings and BuildOns
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9 Scrounging
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10 Backwoods Mechanics
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11 Why They Shoot Bears in Alder Creek
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12 At the Bend in the River Where the Cottonwoods Grow
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Back Cover | |
Spine | |
Common terms and phrases
Alder Creek American animals Bakeless bales bear Belko Benewah County Benewah Road Benewah Valley Benge Bill McPherson bought Bread Loaf Bread Loaf Writers brush build-on Burger's cabin Cady cedar century chain saw Coeur d'Alene daugh dream drive drove early empty engine feet felled a tree felt fence firewood forest forty acres Fred front grass half homestead humans Idaho panhandle imagined John Berger knew land landscape later lipogram litde lived in Alder Lloyds loggers looked Maries McPherson meadow miles mobile home morning mountain moved Mullan Nancy neighbors never north Idaho northern Idaho once piston Radke Rainbolt River roof rural sawyers seemed side snow space Strobel summer talked tell thing timber tion told took town truck turned Vashon Island Volkswagen bus wanted West western white fir winter woods writes yard Yearout