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Sid Marty

Autore di Men for the Mountains

9+ opere 187 membri 3 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Sid Marty's work has appeared in Equinox, Canadian Geographic, National Geographic Traveler, and many Canadian anthologies and literary magazines. He is the author of four previous non-fiction books (Men for the Mountains, Switchbacks, A Grand and Fabulous Notion, and Leaning on the Wind) and three mostra altro collections of poetry. Sid Marty is the recipient of Alberta's 2008 Grant MacEwan Literary Award. He lives in the foothills of southwestern Alberta. mostra meno

Opere di Sid Marty

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Etichette

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
1944
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
Canada
Luogo di residenza
Alberta, Canada
England, UK
Istruzione
Sir George Williams University

Utenti

Recensioni

This is sort of a history of the Province of Alberta in Canada. The book discusses in a cursory way the creation of the geological formations, the ancient native population, settlement and displacement of native aboriginals in the 1800's in the first third of the book. Another third or so describes the settlement of the prairies in early days of the 1900's, relating this time to his own family history in this respect and ending with his own personal diary of raising a family on a mountain ranch.

The book has a casual, very pleasant voice, almost as though you are sitting by a fire listening to someone telling stories of their past. Other than chronologically moving to more modern times as the book progresses, there is little thread of a plot or direction to the book, the author talks about the past, plunges to the present then falls back to the past with ease.

A wistful environmental sentiment regarding life away from the big city, permeates the book. A desire for this life to continue is there too, though you know it has to change sometime soon.

A pleasant page turner and interesting glimpse into life in rural Alberta...without gory detail...a collection of fact and memory.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Lynxear | Feb 24, 2013 |
My initial reservations yielded to admiration as I read this book. Marty wrote this story long after the key events, but with access to many of the key witnesses. He had left the service of Parks Canada before a bear or a couple of different bears began to attack and maul people in the swamps near Banff in August and September 1980.

Marty still has a couple of bugs up his ass on the subject of Parks Canada. He seems to favour the old wardens and their ways of handling things, and sympathizes with them when their practices and hunches were rejected by Parks Canada, without recognizing that they had no great ideas on managing the national Parks in early 80's. At the same time, he writes very well about the problems of managing a park among the conflicts - indeed incommensurable - among the goals of tourists, eco-tourists, tourism operators and naturalists.

There is a couple of mysteries at play - was it one bear or more than one? Two bears were shot, and it was a bad year. The problems stopped after the second bear was caught and killed.

He writes about about bears and animal behavior with some authority as a warden and a rancher, who has had access to leading experts like Stephen Herrero. There are some passages in which he imagines the emotions and memories of a grizzly. I see this writing as outside the sentimental tradition of writing about animals as nearly human actors. That tradition encourages sympathy for animals and delusions about being able to understand and interact with animals. Marty himself was impatient with the ways of tourists and their expectations about seeing the bears in Banff. I tend to side with the thinkers who say that such thought experiments are doomed to fail, except as exercises in sentimental literature. Marty falls into some romantic overkill, visualizing the bear as a giant hungry simpleton lured to its own destruction by the scent of food scraps in the garbage outside the Banff restaurants.

Marty succeed best, perhaps in spite of some of his biases and loyalties. at capturing the terrible ironies, ambiguities and conflicts in the lives of wardens. They imagined their lives as an exercise in freedom in wild nature, and they end up having to clean up the problems of a tourist industry serving the fantasies of world tourism.
… (altro)
 
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BraveKelso | Jan 30, 2009 |
Visitors to the Canadian Rockies escape to the trails for a variety of reasons, sometimes forgetting the risks they encounter when they open the car door and step into the mountain wilderness. A real page turner of true tales as experienced by the author over many years of living in the Alberta foothills.
 
Segnalato
wjaycee | Aug 26, 2008 |

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Statistiche

Opere
9
Opere correlate
2
Utenti
187
Popolarità
#116,277
Voto
½ 3.7
Recensioni
3
ISBN
25
Lingue
1

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