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Mostly Water

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Mostly Water

Contributors:

By (Author) Mary Odden

ISBN:

9781597099196

Publisher:

Red Hen Press

Imprint:

Boreal Books

Publication Date:

2nd June 2020

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Autobiography: general
Gender studies: women and girls
Autobiography: writers
Literary essays
Nature and the natural world: general interest

Dewey:

B

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

248

Dimensions:

Width 139mm, Height 215mm

Description

In Mostly Water, essays form a linked memoir that explores the American outback from eastern Oregon horse trails to the arctic and subarctic river towns of Alaska. In these landscapes, Native people and later-comers are entwined in histories as loopy as northern rivers. Odden invites the reader to a vivid patchwork of characters and seldom-seen places, with a soundtrack from fiddle dances and a menu "half-potlatch and half-potluck." In Mostly Water, readers will hear dance music ring through little towns and watch as friends conspire to stoke the fires and fading memories of an old pioneer. The danger of giving birth takes a crooked path through a mystical elk hunt on its way to the miracle of holding a child. Casual meetings with passengers on an Inside Passage ferry open to intimacy with a Tlingit grandmother and the dignified depths of an ocean-going hobo. Bush town storefronts forsake their rivers to welcome the airplane. The falling of the Twin Towers on 9/11 silences the sky over a remote Alaskan village. Short takes on a vivid personal cuisine divide the longer essays of Mostly Water. In these interludes, dead grandmothers mix it up over turkey gravy and ripe berries are sweet and dangerous after Chernobyl's radioactive winds blow around the top of the Earth. Events of the churning twenty-first century rise like the sea in these stories--but so do music and love and hope in the precious otherness of nature.

Reviews

Mary Oddens essays are a wonder. I dont know what I enjoy most about them, whether it is the clear-eyed re-creation of people and places, the rich music of her language, orand maybe this is where I take the deepest pleasure as I readthose astounding paragraphs where Mary turns to her readers and offers all the gathered insights and ideas her essays have to share. At such moments, I am dazzled by a person of genius who can lead me out into fresh and surprising turns of thought.
Frank Soos, author ofUnpleasantries: Considerations of Difficult Questions


Mary Oddens writing is wise, witty, and frank. This western womans memoir in essays brims with love for family and the rural places Odden calls home. Shes a natural storyteller, and her voice, especially in Going to the Hills, about horsey childhood years in eastern Oregon, and March, a meditation about what it means to be at home in Alaska (and so much more), makes her literary kin to the Norths spiritual grand dame, Margaret Murie.Heather Lende, author ofFind the Good


Mary Odden's authentic, profound, and originalMostly Waterwill thaw parts of you you didn't even know had frozen. Love, work, animals, food, music: were we to disappear, humanity could be remade of the ingredients here set forth by this remarkable writer. Suffused with wonder, steeped in memory, and written in exquisitely musical prose, the essays in this book serve to harmonize head with heart in a way that can only be called wisdom.Richard Hoffman,author ofHalf the HouseandLove & Fury


"Built upon each other with love, these anecdotes articulate connections between people, animals, land, sky, water, music, and memory. Its an intimate book, and not a skimmable one. Nuggets of humor and irony randomly appear like brown sugar in the most unexpected places, and you wont want to miss them."Lisa Alexia,Denali Sunrise


"In this series of spirited essays drawn from her singular life, Alaskan Mary Odden proves to be an exceptional writer, offering up portraits of the people and places that have shaped her wise and loving view of the world...Mostly Water is an especially welcome antidote to the discord and disruption of our current times, a reminder of the large and small pleasures to be found in friendships, families, and the unexpected."Nancy Lord,Anchorage Daily News


"Call this a memoir if you like, but we prefer nature writing, and Odden does it at the highest levelbest served with her pumpkin pie (recipe included)."Matt Sutherland,Foreword Reviews

Author Bio

Mary Oddens essays have appeared in the Georgia Review, Northwest Review, Nimrod, the Alaska Quarterly Review, and Under Northern Lights, an anthology of contemporary Alaska art and writing. Born in eastern Oregon, she traveled north to do forest fire work in Alaska. She studied writing at the University of Montana and the University of Alaska Fairbanks. She has worked as an aviation dispatcher, village teen counselor, writing teacher, and as publisher/editor of a small newspaper in Alaskas Copper River Valley. In 2015, she received a Rasmuson Foundation Individual Artist Award for the essays gathered in Mostly Water. She lives with her husband in Nelchina, Alaska.

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