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We Made It Through the Winter: A Memoir of a Northern Minnesota Boyhood
Contributor(s): Omeara, Walter (Author)
ISBN: 087351212X     ISBN-13: 9780873512121
Publisher: Minnesota Historical Society Press
OUR PRICE:   $21.80  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: April 1987
Qty:
Annotation: In this delightful memoir, O'Meara recounts a ten-year-old boy's year -- season by season -- at the turn of the century in Cloquet, a small town in northern Minnesota. A talented historian/novelist, he vividly evokes the sights and sounds, joys and sorrows of family life set against the background of the lumbering industry when white pine was still king.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Biography & Autobiography | Literary Figures
- History
Dewey: B
Series: Minnesota
Physical Information: 0.4" H x 5.54" W x 8.46" (0.39 lbs) 128 pages
Themes:
- Chronological Period - 1851-1899
- Cultural Region - Great Lakes
- Cultural Region - Midwest
- Demographic Orientation - Small Town
- Geographic Orientation - Minnesota
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
In this delightful memoir, O'Meara recounts a ten-year-old boy's year in the northern Minnesota sawmill town of Cloquet at the turn of the twentieth century. A talented historian/novelist, he vividly evokes the sights and sounds, joys and sorrows of family life set against the background of the lumbering industry when white pine was still king.

Season by season, O'Meara evokes the sights and sounds of family life and work in an era when the crisp days of autumn meant "digging in," and when it was up to the boy in the family to stack firewood for the kitchen range and dig enough potatoes "to last until the return of spring." The author's words recreate the bone-chilling cold of a Minnesota winter when a boy snared rabbits to help supply the family table, when "your ears could freeze to a dead, marble-like whiteness after only a few minutes of exposure," and when a boy's father was gone "up in the woods" to work in one of the forty-odd logging camps near Cloquet. The arrival of spring was marked by his father's return from the camps while summer meant bare feet, the "noisy frontier exuberance" of the Fourth of July, and summer visitors--gypsies, traveling circuses, and chimney sweeps.

A talented historian/novelist, O'Meara vividly evokes the sights and sounds, joys and sorrows of family life set against the background of the lumbering industry when white pine was still king.