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Wild Apples: Field Notes from a River Farm
Contributor(s): Curtis, Wayne (Author)
ISBN: 0864924852     ISBN-13: 9780864924858
Publisher: Goose Lane Editions
OUR PRICE:   $15.26  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: November 2006
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: Wild Apples marks Wayne Curtis's return to the embrace of home and the colourful lives of the people who inspire him. Simple pleasures like fishing on the Miramichi River and chores like cutting wood, planting beans, and picking crabapples call forth homespun recollections. The birth of his sister at Christmastime, the story of his mother in her own words, and a memorable trip to the circus embody unexpected moments of family love. His meditations on public figures such as Robert Frost and Lord Beaverbrook cast a new, humane light on these icons, and he shares his insights into well-known friends including David Adams Richards. Wayne Curtis is a master of evocative writing. Intensely familiar yet strikingly original, his essays will leave readers thinking about their own lives and their own emotional touchstones.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Nature | Essays
- Biography & Autobiography | Personal Memoirs
Dewey: 971.521
Physical Information: 0.44" H x 5.8" W x 7.76" (0.47 lbs) 166 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

There is a dreamlike quality to many of the stories in this new collection from Wayne Curtis. In Wild Apples, he returns to familiar themes of love and longing, and the push-pull emotions which inevitably accompany any attempt to break free of the ties that bind. Simple pleasures abound in these evocative stories, be it fishing on the river, gathering beans for an evening supper (are they beans or has-beens?), or listening to the jukebox at the local diner.

Curtis mines the shaft of everyday experiences, turning each one into a meditation on human nature. In the title story, an afternoon drive yields fertile ground as a father and son stop to shake down a gnarled crab apple tree for the sweet-sour orbs of autumn. With a seemingly effortless style, he casts his line into the river of the past, reeling in tales of youthful folly, the Christmastime birth of a little sister, and life on the Miramichi River, which could be any river, anywhere. Curtis also shares his insight into well-known friends, including novelist David Adams Richards and Yvon Durelle, the Fighting Fisherman. His contemplation of the life and work of Robert Frost casts a fresh light on the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet.


Contributor Bio(s): Curtis, Wayne: - Wayne Curtis (b. 1945) divides his time between Newcastle, New Brunswick, and Fredericton. He is the author of several books of essays about fishing, fishermen and the Miramichi River, two story collections, Preferred Lies (Nimbus, 1998) and River Stories (Nimbus, 2000), and two novels, One Indian Summer (Goose Lane, 1994), the source of "Heavy Ice," and Last Stand (Nimbus, 1999).