Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Salt Stones: Seasons of a Shepherd's Life [Kõva köide]

4.27/5 (2704 hinnangut Goodreads-ist)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 256 pages, kõrgus x laius: 215x139 mm, Illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Jun-2025
  • Kirjastus: Milkweed Editions
  • ISBN-10: 1571311629
  • ISBN-13: 9781571311627
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 256 pages, kõrgus x laius: 215x139 mm, Illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Jun-2025
  • Kirjastus: Milkweed Editions
  • ISBN-10: 1571311629
  • ISBN-13: 9781571311627
Teised raamatud teemal:
LONGLISTED FOR THE NATIONAL BOOK AWARD

Finalist for the Vermont Book Awards

A New Yorker Best Book of the Year

Featured on NPR's Fresh Air and PBS NewsHour

A Globe and Mail "Best Book of the Year"

"Revelatory. . . magical. . . Whybrow beautifully explores interconnectedness and disruption in nature."Maureen Corrigan, The Washington Post 





Set in Vermont's Green Mountains, a profoundly moving meditation on the lessons and wisdom that come from raising a family, tending sheep, and living close to the land.

In the heart of Vermonts Green Mountains, Helen Whybrow and her partner set out to restore an old two-hundred-acre farm. Knowing that belonging requires, more than anything, participation, they begin to intertwine their lives with the land. But soon after releasing a flock of Icelandic sheep onto the worn-out fields, Whybrow realizes that the art of shepherding extends far beyond the flock and fences of Knoll Farm.

In prose both vivid and lean, The Salt Stones offers an intimate and profoundly moving story of what it means to care for a flock and truly inhabit a piece of land. The shepherds life unfolds for Whybrow in the seasons and cycles of farming and familybirthing lambs, fending off coyotes, rescuing lost sheep in a storm, and raising children while witnessing her mothers decline. Exploring the interdependence of animals, as well as of the earth and ourselves, Whybrow reflects on the ways sheep connect her to place and to the ancient practice of shepherding. 

Evocative, affectionate, and illuminating, The Salt Stones sings of a way of life that is at once ancient and entirely contemporary, inspiring us all to seek greater intimacy and a sense of belonging wherever our home place may be.

Arvustused

Spare prose, great storytelling.Esquire

Whybrow is uniquely positioned to understand what humans have lost in severing their bond with nature, yet her message is more hopeful than bleak.The New Yorker, "Best Book of the Year

Revelatory. . . magical. . . Whybrow beautifully explores interconnectedness and disruption in nature.Maureen Corrigan, The Washington Post 

Whybrow's closely-observed accounts of her working life as a shepherd are filled with muck, sweat and a hard-won sense of the interconnectedness of the natural world.NPR "Fresh Air" 

Beautiful . . . Whybrow's prose is alive. In witnessing the hard but simple work of shepherding these animals, readers will feel themselves somehow tended to.Kate Tuttle, The Boston Globe 

The Salt Stones is a paean to slowing down, observing the world around us more closely, and re-engaging with nature's rhythms and traditional knowledge.ABC NEWS, Best Book of the Year

"Whybrow writes in compelling, finely chiseled prose about the annual seasonal rhythms at her beloved Knoll Farm. . . . The perfect tonic for these turbulent times."BookPage, starred review





This beautiful memoir is an exploration of shepherding, relationships, and the big, meaningful questions of life.BookRiot

A luminous and necessary addition to the literature of food and farming.Jonnah Perkins, Civil Eats 

Through gripping anecdotes and thought-provoking meditations, this superbly crafted memoir recounts a quarter century of raising sheep.Margot Harrison, Seven Days Vermont





Whybrow constantly looks to the past as she writes into the future, which in many ways is a practice required of any modern farmer.Maine Organic Farmers and Gardeners Magazine

Helen Whybrow is a to-the-bone writer, and this is a to-the-bone bookbeautiful, real, full of life. Youll reread it.Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature

Riveting, breathtaking, intensely powerful, The Salt Stones pulses with life. I deeply love this wise and beautiful book about land and belonging, love and loss, motherhood and daughterhood, and so much more.Janisse Ray, author of Ecology of a Cracker Childhood

In her poetic and provocative offerings on her life as a shepherd to a flock of sheep, Helen Whybrow evokes the spirit that Aretha Franklin brought to her transcendent recording of Somewhere. Read Whybrow. Listen to Franklin. Rejoice!Evelyn C. White, author of Alice Walker

A truly moving book, in prose and spirit, filled with deep insights, rich stories, and memorable scenes, a book to be savored and widely shared.Scott Russell Sanders, author of A Private History of Awe

This profound book returns our gaze to forgotten connections with our animal kin, the Earth, and ourselves. Each paragraph shimmers with heart. With Wendell Berrys sensibilities and Robin Wall Kimmerers poetic insights, Whybrow leads her readers through fertile fields of discovery and knowing.Hank Lentfer, author of Ravens Witness

Helen Whybrow is the author of A Man Apart: Bill Coperthwaites Radical Experiment in Living and Dead Reckoning: Great Adventure Writing from 18001900. She is also the editor of many anthologies, including Hearth: A Global Conversation on Community, Identity, and Place and Coming to Land in a Troubled World. Her writing has appeared in Cagibi, Hunger Mountain, EatingWell, and Orion. She is a visiting professor at Middlebury College and has taught at the Bread Loaf Environmental Writers Conference. She lives in the Green Mountains of Vermont, where she shepherds a two-hundred-acre organic farm.







Wren Fortunoff grew up farming and loves very long trail runs in the mountains. She has illustrated on paper bags, T-shirts, dead trees, feet, and walls. This is her first book.