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OverviewA poet at heart, Amy Minato rejects her life of consumption in Chicago to go back to nature-specifically, to a commune in Oregon, where she rediscovers herself. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Amy MinatoPublisher: Skyhorse Publishing Imprint: Skyhorse Publishing Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 21.00cm Weight: 0.376kg ISBN: 9781602393288ISBN 10: 1602393281 Pages: 240 Publication Date: 12 February 2009 Audience: General/trade , General , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable ![]() The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsReviewsA restless city poet recounts her experiment with country living.<p>The idea to swim against the consumptive current and move west came to Minato (The Wider Lens, 2004) during a Chicago traffic jam. Increasingly bothered by the global impact her metropolitan existence was having on the environment, the poet packed up and headed to Oregon for graduate school. But after eight years, even Eugene proved too urban for her, and she moved again, this time to a ten-square-foot cabin that was part of an eight-acre commune on Siesta Lane in the relative wilds of Rainbow Valley, Ore. Her memoir, a veritable menagerie of thoughts, observations, photos, poems and lovely pen-and-ink drawings by Muir, is the result of Minato 's year or so away, where she discovered as much about herself as the wonders of nature. Not so simple simple living, she realized early on. Characterizing each of her fellow Siesta Lane residents, the author doesn t neglect herself, saying she 's a single woman with ninety-eight part-time jobs trying to figure out how she connects to the greater forces of the universe and to the tiny earwigs that hide in the curled-up seed heads of Queen Anne 's lace. Part of this volume 's charm lies in its somewhat fractured composition, which mirrors the author 's state of mind during this transitional period. Short chapters hop from Incubation to Freaks to July to The Garden, while loosely conveying the sense of time 's passage as Minato adjusted to her rustic domestic situation. Living without many modern conveniences for example, only the commune 's main building had a kitchen and running water led her to provocative conclusions: For us it appears to primarily be the mind that evolves, and we then cater our surroundings to our weakening bodies. She took some radical actions as well, such as getting rid of her cat after he brought home one too many birds.<p>An evocative record of a year in the woods and an interesting study in enacting one 's beliefs. A restless city poet recounts her experiment with country living. <p>The idea to swim against the consumptive current and move west came to Minato (The Wider Lens, 2004) during a Chicago traffic jam. Increasingly bothered by the global impact her metropolitan existence was having on the environment, the poet packed up and headed to Oregon for graduate school. But after eight years, even Eugene proved too urban for her, and she moved again, this time to a ten-square-foot cabin that was part of an eight-acre commune on Siesta Lane in the relative wilds of Rainbow Valley, Ore. Her memoir, a veritable menagerie of thoughts, observations, photos, poems and lovely pen-and-ink drawings by Muir, is the result of Minato's year or so away, where she discovered as much about herself as the wonders of nature. Not so simple-simple living, she realized early on. Characterizing each of her fellow Siesta Lane residents, the author doesn't neglect herself, saying she's a single woman with ninety-eight part-time jobs trying to figure out how she connects to the greater forces of the universe and to the tiny earwigs that hide in the curled-up seed heads of Queen Anne's lace. Part of this volume's charm lies in its somewhat fractured composition, which mirrors the author's state of mind during this transitional period. Short chapters hop from Incubation to Freaks to July to The Garden, while loosely conveying the sense of time's passage as Minato adjusted to her rustic domestic situation. Living without many modern conveniences-for example, only the commune's main building had a kitchen and running water-led her to provocative conclusions: For us it appears to primarily be the mind thatevolves, and we then cater our surroundings to our weakening bodies. She took some radical actions as well, such as getting rid of her cat after he brought home one too many birds. <p>An evocative record of a year in the woods and an interesting study in enacting one's beliefs. Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |