A memoir of building a cabin, and rebuilding a family, in Nova Scotia:
“In the rich tradition of Thoreau’s Walden and Tracy Kidder’s
House” (The New York Times). In 1990, writer Charles Gaines and
his artist wife, Patricia, bought 160 acres of wild land on the
northeast coast of Nova Scotia. Eventually, they began to see the land
as a place that might heal their recently battered marriage, and as an
opportunity to take on a big, risky, long-term project instead of
settling into the caution and gradual losses of middle-class middle
age. Enlisting their children and their daughter’s carpenter
boyfriend, they decided to build a cabin on the land the following
summer, with their own hands, as a family venture. This
“heartwarming memoir” recounts that summer’s sometimes
harrowing, sometimes hilarious events with passages of the family’s
history that dramatize what is at stake for each of them in Nova
Scotia (Publishers Weekly). Gaines describes the process of building a
cabin while living in tents without electricity or running water, and
the pleasures and limitations of a life so simplified that a week’s
biggest social event is a bonfire. He draws a portrait of the small,
generous Acadian community of farmers and lobster fishermen
surrounding their land, and traces the history of that land to its
original French-Acadian owner. And he tracks the mood of his family
through the long, difficult summer—from initial enthusiasm to near
mutiny, and finally to exhilaration and deep satisfaction at having
built something that will last. “Remarkable.” —Susan Cheever
“Weaving together details of construction and carpentry with
personal revelations about marriage and midlife, the narrative works
as both a factual account of housebuilding and a poetic testimony of
love lost and found . . . A beautifully written memoir.”
—Kirkus Reviews
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781510717916
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Vendor
Skyhorse Publishing (Open Road)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter