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The Animal One Thousand Miles Long: Seven Lengths of Vermont and Other Adventures

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Animal One Thousand Miles Long: Seven Lengths of Vermont and Other Adventures

Contributors:

By (Author) Leath Tonino

ISBN:

9781595348586

Publisher:

Trinity University Press,U.S.

Imprint:

Trinity University Press,U.S.

Publication Date:

7th January 2019

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Walking, hiking, trekking
Travel and holiday
Poetry
Conservation of the environment
Nature and the natural world: general interest

Dewey:

917.43

Prizes:

Short-listed for Banff Mountain Book Competition Awards 2019

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

224

Dimensions:

Width 127mm, Height 203mm

Description

The phrase an animal a thousand miles miles long, attributed to Aristotle, refers to a sprawling body that cannot be seen in its entirety from a single angle, a thing too vast and complicated to be knowable as a whole.

For Leath Tonino, the animal a thousand miles long is the landscape of his native Vermont. Tonino grew up along the shores of Lake Champlain, situated between Vermonts Green Mountains and New Yorks Adirondacks. His career as a nature and travel writer has taken him across the country, but he always turns his eye back on his home state. All along, he writes, Ive been exploring various parts of the animal, trying to make a prose map of its bodynot to understand it in a conclusive or definitive way but rather to celebrate it, to hint at its possibilities.

This fragmented yet deep search is the overarching theme of the twenty essays in The Animal One Thousand Miles Long. Tonino posits that geography, natural history, human experience, and local traditions, seasons, and especially atypical outingson skis, bicycles, sleds, and boogie boardscan open us to a place and, simultaneously, open a place to us. He looks closely at what he calls "huge-small" Vermont, but his underlying mission is to demonstrate our collective need to better understand the meaning of place, especially the ones we call home and think we know best. From Laredo to Jackson Hole, San Francisco to Burlington, his sensibility is applicable to us all.

In his signature piece, Seven Lengths of Vermont, he traverses the length of the state in seven different waysa twenty-day hike, 500 miles on bicycle, a thirty-six-ride hitchhiking tour, 260 miles in a canoe, ten days swimming Lake Champlain, a three-week ski trek, and a two-hour vast and fast flyover. He plots each route with blue ink on maps strung across his office. Each inky thread was an animal a thousand miles long, he writes. Vermont appeared before me as a menagerie.

What Bill Bryson's A Walk in the Woods did for the Appalachian Trail and Peter Mayle's A Year in Provence did for the South of France, Tonino's affinity for the land he calls home gives a new perspective on the Green Mountain State. His infectious love of the outdoors, the ground of everyday life, should inspire us to explore the places just outside our own front door.

Reviews

REVIEWS Anyone who loves Vermont will want this on her bookshelfa funny, smart, and novel look at the Green Mountains. Bill McKibben, author of Radio Free Vermont In The Animal One Thousand Miles Long, Leath Tonino draws a lyrical map for Vermont with a voice that is part scientist, part poet, part historian, and part adventurer. Toninos map shows us not the major cities and highest peaks but the lesser known places and ideas at the heart of Vermontthe abandoned towns, uncommon sports, and forgotten people. Sean Prentiss, author of Finding Abbey "Leath Tonino brings the same verve to his writing as he does to the mountaineering, winter kayaking, and jack jumping chronicled in this vivid collection. His accounts of headlong adventures in the Champlain bioregion both dazzle a reader with their arresting descriptions and bubble with mirth. But Toninos greatest achievement may be conveying how the pursuit of lostness in the wilds may offer an experience of home as deep as geology, as thrilling as a sky full of snow geese. John Elder, author of Reading the Mountains of Home and The Frog Run This engaging book of dispatches from field and forest shows us Vermont as weve never seen it before. Dispelling the notion of wilderness as a western phenomenon, Leath Tonino opens his native Green Mountain State to readers both near and far, revealing the beauty and diversity of this remarkable place. Tonino is the most companionable of trail companions, taking us along on adventures that include mountaineering, sledding, skating, and plenty more. The crescendo of this delightful journey is the extraordinary final chapter, in which the author roves the state from end to end on seven different routes by seven different modes of travel: hiking, hitchhiking, skiing, cycling, canoeing, swimming, and flying in a light aircraft. The result is a surprising, adventurous, openhearted exploration that fully delivers on what Tonino rightly calls the 'inexhaustibility of home." Michael P. Branch, author of Rants from the Hill and How to Cuss in Western [Leath Tonino's] enthusiasm for the wild spaces [of Vermont] like the raw, rocky summit of Vermonts most prominent peak as well as the inhabited places farmers waving from tractors is infectious. His love for the scraggly side of Vermont is evident in his descriptions of beavers as furry, big-toothed landscape architects and the sky pink and purple and delicate blue. His recognition and celebration of all things Vermont is refreshing and inspiring, and reminds everyone to look at our surroundings in a new light. Addison Independent With evocative, gently humorous and reflective prose, Tonino conveys an impassioned embrace of untold adventures that can and should be found nearby. Seven Days Vermont Not womenwomen have therapy and friendship, so were good on the 'voyage to discovery' tipbut men are, apparently, still working through that. This falls best journey is Leath Toninos ramble through the topography and history of his home state of Vermont in The Animal One Thousand Miles Long. Outside Magazine Fragmented yet deep search... E Magazine Reading Leith Tonino will definitely leave you wanting to go for a walk. Eagle Times The native of the Champlain Valley bicycles, hikes, hitchhikes and canoes through his home state. Burlington Free Press

Author Bio

Leath Toninio, a writer from Vermont, has also worked as a wildlife biologist in Arizona, a blueberry farmer in New Jersey, and a snow shoveler in Antarctica. His essays, reported stories, and interviews appear in magazines such as Outside, Mens Journal, Orion, Tricycle, Utne Reader, and The Sun. When not at his desk, he roams North Americas libraries and wildlands.

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