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Lambs in Winter: Sketches of a Vermont Life through Seasons of Change

Autor Alexis Lathem
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 4 noi 2025
Finding hope in a small farm, an engaged community, and an age-old connection to the earth

After half a lifetime spent moving from place to place, Alexis Lathem at last settled down with her husband on a small farm near Vermont’s largest city. The lyric essays of Lambs in Winter take readers through the seasonal cycles of raising sheep and hens and growing fruits and vegetables while confronting the challenges of winter storms, summer floods, invasive weeds, and pests and diseases.

Ever conscious of her place in a historically colonized and ecologically degraded landscape, Lathem wrestles with ethical questions that come to many rural dwellers who—following Thoreau—set out to “live deliberately,” in a time of climate crisis, persistent racial inequity, and growing economic inequality. Likewise, she grapples with the moral complexities of small-scale animal husbandry. Through her efforts at self-provisioning, without holding illusions of the self-reliant individual, Lathem finds herself deeply embedded in the community and reliant on others, especially as her region deals with repeated catastrophic flooding brought on by climate change.

Through elegant prose and insightful investigations into pressing contemporary issues, Lathem evokes the world of her farm and the surrounding countryside with a spiritual awareness of the human journey on this earth. Living in place, attuned to the unfolding changes in the world around her, gives her much to grieve, but the pages of Lambs in Winter are luminous with moments of joy and beauty.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781625349019
ISBN-10: 1625349017
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Editura: Bright Leaf
Colecția Bright Leaf

Notă biografică

ALEXIS LATHEM is an essayist, poet, journalist, teacher, activist, gardener, and craftsperson. She is the author of the poetry collection Alphabet of Bones and two chapbooks, and holds an MFA in Writing from Vermont College of Fine Arts. Her work has been supported by the National Endowment for the Arts, the Vermont Arts Council, the Black Earth Institute, the Bread Loaf Writer’s Conference, the Marble House Project, and the Chelsea Award for Poetry. She has worked in food and environmental justice organizations for many years and reported widely on farm policy and environmental conflicts in Indigenous communities. Her essays and poems have appeared in About Place, AWP Chronicle, The Hopper, Hunger Mountain, Gettysburg Review, Solstice, West Branch, and elsewhere. She lives with her musician husband on a small farm in the Winooski River Valley, ancestral land of the Abenaki. 

Recenzii

"Having lived in these northern mountains my whole adult life, I can testify that these are note-perfect accounts of this wonderful, tough and rewarding place. Farming is about many things--stock, and crops, of course, but also other people. And, inevitably, the politics, of everything from immigration to climate. They come together in these pages in a way that will move you and make you both think and dream."—Bill McKibben, author Radio Free Vermont

“Lathem’s writing is beautifully evocative, giving just enough of the right details to allow her reader to fully inhabit the world she describes. Lambs in Winter is for anyone who enjoys reading about farming and the natural world.”—Jane Brox, author of In the Merrimack Valley: A Farm Trilogy

“An engaging and poetic narrative, Lambs in Winter tells a compelling personal story while offering insights into urgent social issues, from the ethics of animal husbandry and meat eating to the plight of migrant workers, personal relationships to the land and the widening impacts of climate-related disruptions.”—Brian Tokar, coeditor of Climate Justice and Community Renewal: Resistance and Grassroots Solutions