Meat Eater: Adventures From The Life Of An Amer...
Steven Rinella grew up in rural Michigan, the son of a hunter who taught his sons to love the natural world the way he did. As a child, Rinella devoured stories of the American wilderness. He shot his first squirrel at eight and his first deer at thirteen. He chose the colleges he went to by their proximity to good hunting ground, and he experimented with living solely off wild meat. As an adult, he feeds his family from the food he hunts. Meat Eater chronicles Rinella's lifelong relationship with nature and hunting through the lens of ten hunts in the remotest corners of North America. Through each story, he grapples with themes such as the role of the hunter in shaping America, the vanishing frontier, the ethics of killing, the allure of hunting trophies, the responsibilities that human predators have to their prey, and the disappearance of the hunter himself as Americans lose their connection with the way their food finds its way to their tables.--From publisher description.
Meat Eater: Adventures from the Life of an Amer...
Steven Rinella is the host of the long-running television show MeatEater and top-ranked MeatEater podcast. He is the New York Times bestselling author of ten books dealing with wildlife, hunting, fishing, and wild game cooking, most recently Outdoor Kids in an Inside World: Getting Your Family Out of the House and Radically Engaged with Nature and the audio original, MeatEater's Campfire Stories: Narrow Escapes and More Close Calls. He is the recipient of the Conservation Achievement Award from The Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership.
"Truth be told, I have lived a life plenty comfortable with my disdain toward hunters and hunting. And then along comes Steven Rinella and his revelatory memoir Meat Eater to ruin everything. Unless you count the eternal pursuit of the unmetered parking space, I am not a hunter. I am, however, on a constant quest for good writing. Meat Eater begins with a promise--'This book has a hell of a lot going for it, simply because it's a hunting story'--and then delivers ceaselessly, like a Domino's guy with O.C.D. This is survival of the most literate. Graphic, sure, but less so than an episode of 'CSI, ' and with more believable emoting...this--genuine passion, humbly conveyed--is when nonfiction slaughters fiction and hangs it over its mantel. The text is relentlessly vivid and clear...the commitment, effort and ardor are unflinching. What Rinella does to prepare a muskrat trap when he's in fifth grade takes five more steps and is infinitely more loving than whatever I did as a fifth grader to break in my baseball glove. With every chapter, you get a history lesson, a hunting lesson, a nature lesson and a cooking lesson, and most of the chapters end with 'tasting notes' on various game. ... Readers will never ask themselves, 'What is he talking about?' The only question they might have is, 'Why isn't this guy the head of the N.R.A.?'... [A]gain and again, his descriptive powers trump gruesomeness.... Meat Eater offers an overabundance to savor." --New York Times Book Review "As Steven Rinella is quick to point out, the hunting story is the oldest sort of story there is. Humans developed language, it is commonly held, to tell them. When told properly, as they are in Meat Eater, such stories are not simple gloats by the successful hunter around the table, proudly chewing on the biggest portion of meat and relishing the respect he has earned from his tribe by bringing back the protein. Rather, they are stories of man's relationships with his fellow hunters, his family, the land and the animals. The stories in Meat Eater are full of empathy and intelligence....In some sections of the book, the author's prose is so engrossing, so riveting, that it matches, punch for punch, the best sports writing. When Mr. Rinella wades into the surging Grand River, to throw a fly for steelheads, the story moves as well as Tom Callahan writing about Johnny Unitas in the 1958 championship or Bill Nack writing about Secretariat." --Wall Street Journal "Relentlessly descriptive and endlessly evocative 'tasting guides' at the close of each chapter help armchair hunters get a sense of what it might be like digging into their own heaping plate of camp meat, deer hearts or sun-dried jerky...the writing is steadfastly satisfying and clear. The author wisely allows philosophical questions pertaining to the validity of hunting and the efficacy of state-enforced regulations to simmer in the background, and he effectively shows nature in all its glory...An insider's look at hunting that devotees and nonparticipants alike should find fascinating." --Kirkus "On one level, [Rinella has] penned an entertaining collection of the sort of anecdotes that, if you had the good luck to meet him at a Brooklyn hipster's cocktail party, would be conversational gold. Though animals figure almost as prominently in his narrative as people, Rinella is an astute observer, with an eye for delightfully telling details...But in Meat Eater, Rinella does more than tell stories well and share exotic cooking tips. He writes from the standpoint of a married writer and father living in one of the world's more densely populated metropolises. His book sets up an implicit contrast between city and wilderness, semi-settled midlife and a more footloose young manhood." --Paste
"For the typical urbanite, feeling disdain for gun owners is about as easy as broiling a boneless, shrink-wrapped chicken breast: They're hicks. Red State rubes. Mowing down Bambi with their assault rifles. Meanwhile, we meander the supermarket aisles, poking around for grass-fed this or free-range that, floating in a cloud of ethical contradiction and denial. Without breaking it down this polemically, Steven Rinella, in his memoir, Meat Eater, rigorously describes his trajectory from unexamined to intensely reconstructed killer of wildlife, a progression that should assist the typical city slicker in replacing categorical dismissal with something more akin to nuanced understanding...It's evident from Chapter 1 that we are in the hands of a seriously experienced hunter-gatherer and writer, which translates on most pages to very authentic-feeling reenactments of the hunt, including both its inherent vibrancy and distress. And critically, we witness Rinella's evolving sense of what all this killing might mean. Acutely conveyed are the ways society is elbowing aside an age-old practice, often bloody and brutal, and replacing it with practices numbingly antiseptic and increasingly unreal. By the end, regardless of how you feel about guns or hunting, its appeal has ironically been made alive. It's the perfect negative image of our pervasive technological moment -- bracing, dangerous, and direct rather than mediated, packaged, and disassociated....Rinella's writing is unerringly smart, direct, and sharply detailed...Each of his small-bore narratives, whether it unfolds on Michigan's Upper Peninsula, Montana, Alaska, Arizona, or Mexico, bristles with the magic of a specific, authentic place." --Boston Globe
"Chances are, Steven Rinella's life is very different than yours or mine. He does not source his food at the local supermarket. Meat Eater is a unique and valuable alternate view of where our food comes from--and what can be involved. It's a look both backward, at the way things used to be--and forward--to a time when every diner truly understands what's on the end of the fork." --Anthony Bourdain
"Woven into Rinella's thoughtful prose detailing his outdoor adventures (or misadventures, in some cases) are historical, ecological, or technical observations dealing with the landscape, the animals, or the manner in which the game is harvested. Also, almost every chapter is finished with short 'Tasting Notes' that outline the culinary dos and don'ts for meat from game like squirrel, black bear, and mountain lion. Rinella has a passion for hunting and wilderness that comes across in his writing, and even if you don't agree with his ideas on hunting lions with dogs or catch-and-release fishing you can't help pondering the arguments he makes. And that seems to be the point of the book, to make you think--about your relationship with nature, about what you eat and why you eat it--and if that's Rinella's motivation, this book succeeds." --Publishers Weekly
According to Charlotte Beck, in Robert Penn Warren: Critic , Warren wrote his large and distinguished body of literary criticism "chiefly for much-needed money" (2). No commercial motive, however, can be ascribed to portraits of other artists that Warren construed in the genre of poetry, a guaranteed money loser for both poet and publisher. Drawn from real life, these portraits of artists--which number seven in all--raise the question of why these figures in particular stirred Warren's poetic creativity, especially since two of them (Gustave Flaubert and Paul Valéry) wrote in a foreign language, and the other five include an English Puritan (Milton), a Transcendentalist prophet (Emerson), two exponents of naturalism (Twain and Dreiser), and a painter of birds (Audubon)--all figures who have little in common either with each other or with Warren himself. Another curious feature of these seven poems is that Warren barely mentions the great achievements of these artists--Paradise Lost, Madame Bovary, Huckleberry Finn, An American Tragedy, The Birds of North America . Though he surely admired these works, Warren's poems appear to have some other focus in mind.
This self-help resource demonstrates how some of life's most important and joyous lessons can come from life's hardest knocks.ExploreBooks like Yesterday I CriedBook lists with this bookWhy do people like this book?TopicsLife satisfactionThe United KingdomEnergy healingFaith healingGenresComing soon!PreviewBookshop.orgAmazonForks Over KnivesByGene Stone, 041b061a72