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Eating Dirt
 
 

Eating Dirt [Hardcover]

Charlotte Gill
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 29.95
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Review

"...Gill worked as a tree-planter for 20 years, and all I can say is: she should have been writing. Well, maybe not, because then we wouldn't have gotten this incredible memoir...Eating Dirt exposes what life is like planting trees, peels away the bark to the soft underbelly, and the result is a beautiful and brutal exploration of a unique career and the people who choose it." (In the Next Room 20110505)

"A joy of a book! Eating Dirt romps through the grime, the pain, and the legendary, eccentric life-styles of the tribe of tree planters. In this natural history of tree planting, Charlotte Gill discovers beauty even in the clearcuts of our thrashed forests, and the often-deranged culture that works to protect the remnants of a noble environment." (Brian Brett, author of "Trauma Farm" 20110505)

"With this book, Charlotte Gill has fitted a key piece, long missing from the story of West Coast logging. What happens after these wild landscapes have been stripped of trees is an important, if painful topic, and it is hard to imagine a writer (and tree planter!) better qualified than Gill to tell this story of death and rebirth in the woods. In the same spare, unflinching prose that brought her such acclaim for her short stories, Gill takes us into the remote and rarely seen world of the tree planter, immersing us in the unique combination of sweat, fog, heartache and humor that distinguishes it from all other labors." (John Vaillant, author of "The Tiger" 20110901)

"Anyone familiar with [Gill's] sharp collection of short fiction, Ladykiller, will expect this book to deliver much more than just a taste of dirt. It does...Gill combines details about her fellow ""tribe members"" with her own observations of the land and the job they're tasked with, and blends descriptions of tree planters' daily routines with anecdotes about unusual creatures and situations they encounter during their travails. In the hands of this wordsmith, the mundane becomes magical...With Eating Dirt, Gill has produced a winner. Not all of the two million seedlings she planted during her two decades in the wild will have thrived, but this book will." (Cherie Thiessen Quill & Quire 20110830)

"A beautifully written and absorbing book." (Finding Solutions 20110909)

"...an engrossing account of not only tree-planting's unique culture, but of the role it plays in the larger industrial enterprise that surrounds it."

(Michael Lawson National Post 20110926)

"Eating Dirt offers a look at tree-planting life with all of its soggy and gritty details. It tells the story of the magical life of the forest as well as the ancient relationship between humans and trees, which are our slowest-growing renewable resource. The book reveals the environmental impact of logging, and also questions the ability of artificially created conifer plantations to replace original forests that evolve over millennia into complex ecosystems." (Hilary Weston Writer's Trust Prize 20110927)

"In her new book, Eating Dirt, [Charlotte Gill] questions whether the intricate relationships between species that have developed over centuries in old-growth forests can be replaced through the efforts of an army of shovels." (Canadian Geographic 20111001)

"Charlotte Gill recalls a season of tree planting, meditates on the cold, the heat, the bugs, the bears, the glories of old forests and earthy kinship in her memoir, Eating Dirt." (Leslie Scrivener Toronto Star 20111002)

"[For Charlotte Gill] there are no more hips bruised from carrying bags of trees, no more blistered heels, legs rubbed hairless from chafing, no more encounters with bears sniffing at the wild air, no more falling into blurry, wine-dark taverns in lumber towns, but for readers, there is this book, this experience, this gift..." (Denise Ryan Vancouver Sun 20111005)

"Gill's book, Eating Dirt is a gritty look into the lives of tree planters." (Burns Lake Lakes District News 20111007)

"Gill...brings all her storytelling ability to make her tree-planting 'tribe' come alive. These are human beings, all right, and the descriptions of their trials and triumphs, the rigours and rewards of tree planting in these massive landscapes are eloquent and evocative...Itís a unique work, a lyric saga of toil and sweat and a meditation on the complexities of nature and the changes human beings bring." (Vancouver Sun 20111021)

"Her prose style suits the subject: short, stabbing sentences like tree trunks or mosquito bites." (Montreal Gazette 20111022)

"Gill gracefully guides us through the world of the tree planter from the beginning to the end of a season, dedicating plenty of attention to the details of bush life. And nestled among her personal experiences is her perspective on the world behind the industry: the politics, science and history of forestry around the globe. Gill's strength lies in describing the people she has met...They practically jump off the page, thanks to her beautiful prose and sensitivity to detail." (MacKenzie Cheater Winnipeg Free Press 20111021)

"Eating Dirt, will endure as a testament to the vital but often overlooked actual and symbolic role that forests, tree-planters and tree-planting continue to play in our times." (The Tyee 20111030)

"Eating Dirt should be required reading for everyone in BC and millions of others." (Candace Fertile Victoria Times Colonist 20111028)

"Gill's is a book you can live in. You come to speak its language and to feel as she feels." (William Bryant Logan Globe & Mail 20111201)

"A thoroughly Canadian story, Eating Dirt, is not out of place alongside other classic memoirs of the bush by Susanna Moodie or Farley Mowat."

(Quill & Quire 20111104)

"The book is like a forest itself. It's very rich and the writing is lush, and full of imagery. Gill allows the reader to see the landscapes that she is travelling through. She is able to take the reader into the forest, and into the brutal tree-planting experience."

(Daily Herald-Tribune 20111125)

"Gill's story of a life spent planting seedlings for pay, mandated in Canada's clear-cut forests, is entrancing if horrifying. The dirt, physical pain, loneliness, camaraderie and primordial awe are elbowing for space in Gill's remarkable memoir of an awful job."

(Heather Mallick Toronto Star 20111128)

"...engaging, rewarding and full of knowledge...Eating Dirt is so winning because it bridges the dizzying gulf between the people who command that work be done and the people who do it."

(William Bryant Logan Globe & Mail Top 100 20111129)

"Combining novelistic insight, research, and nearly two decades of first-hand knowledge of her subject, Gill offers an engrossing, at times meditative account of the makeshift society and piecework economy of tree-planters on Vancouver Island. A thoroughly Canadian story, Eating Dirt is not out of place alongside other classic memoirs of the bush by Susanna Moodie or Farley Mowat."

(Quill & Quire Best Books of 2011 20111216)

"Charlotte spent a couple of decades as a tree planter in BC and she shares an intimate look into the industry and the weird world of reforestation which could also be described as a subculture." (Vancouver is Awesome 20120109)

"Only a writer as skilled as Charlotte Gill could make the back-breaking work of planting more than a million seedlings sound like one of life's essential adventures. In a carefully balanced story of science, business and friendship, and one that is surprisingly unsentimental, Gill shares her love for Canada's boreal forests, the tragedy of their disappearances and the grueling work involved in replacing them. Reader, you might finish this book feeling relieved you don't plant trees -- but you will be wishing you could." (Charles Taylor Prize for Literary Fiction Jury 20120205)

"Eating Dirt, shortlisted for the Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Prize for Non-Fiction, is replete with the gritty, closely observed details only a true insider can provide." (Adrian Chamberlain Victoria Times-Colonist 20120202)

"[Eating Dirt] journeys across mountain roads, ocean swells and raw Canadian wilderness, unearthing the unique subculture of tree planters." (The Martlet 20120201)

"Gill's writing is poetic and raw, weaving a story of people, economics, the environmental marks of deforestation." (Rocky Mountain Outlook 20120209)

"In prose that is at once lyrical, nuanced and sharp-edged, Gill examines a trade and a way of life, from the micro (the way even the most barren-seeming of clear-cuts is swarming with tiny life) to the macro (the sheer scale of Canada's timber industry)." (Brian Bethune Maclean's 20120208)

"Charlotte Gill delivers an insider's perspective on the gruelling, remote, and largely ignored world of that uniquely modern-day, 'tribe,' the tree planterÖShe writes the forest like Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven painted it: bringing it vividly to life in all its mythic grandeur with striking details and evocative analogies, using intelligence, verve, and humour to illuminate the dangers that live within, and threaten from without." (BC National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction Jury 20120214)

"A...literary ode to the grittiness of the work, Eating Dirt also educates the reader on tree biology and the history of the West Coast forests." (Globe & Mail 20120301)

"Eating Dirt is the veteran tree planter's homage to not only planting life, but to the larger context in which deforestation and reforestation take place. It is also a journey through [Gill's] planting career as it comes near to its bitter-sweet end." (Noreen Mae Ritsema Rabble.ca )

Book Description

Winner of the BC National Award for Non-Fiction, and short-listed for both the Charles Taylor Prize for Literary Non-Fiction and the 2011 Hilary Weston Writer's Trust Award.

A tree planter's vivid story of a unique subculture and the magical life of the forest.

Charlotte Gill spent twenty years working as a tree planter in the forests of Canada. During her million-tree career, she encountered hundreds of clearcuts, each one a collision site between human civilization and the natural world, a complicated landscape presenting geographic evidence of our appetites. Charged with sowing the new forest in these clearcuts, tree planters are a tribe caught between the stumps and the virgin timber, between environmentalists and loggers.

In Eating Dirt, Gill offers up a slice of tree planting life in all of its soggy, gritty exuberance, while questioning the ability of conifer plantations to replace original forests that evolved over millennia into complex ecosystems. She looks at logging's environmental impact and its boom-and-bust history, and touches on the versatility of wood, from which we have devised countless creations as diverse as textiles and airplane parts.

Eating Dirt also eloquently evokes the wonder of trees, which grow from tiny seeds into one of the world's largest organisms, our slowest-growing "renewable" resource. Most of all, the book joyously celebrates the priceless value of forests and the ancient, ever-changing relationship between humans and trees.

Published in partnership with the David Suzuki Foundation.

(20120416)

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt
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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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4 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Literary non-fiction at its best, Dec 19 2011
This review is from: Eating Dirt (Hardcover)
I read this a few months ago, when it first came out. Like a lot of Canadians, I tree-planted for one summer, 20 years ago. So I'm not a die-hard tree-planter or anything, but I was curious to read the author's take on a quintessentially Canadian rite of passage. It ended up being a very pleasant surprise -- it's absolutely beautifully written, an incredible portrait of a region, an occupation, and a tribe of people. Gill is better known as a fiction writer, and it shows: she tells us an engaging story, instead of just listing a bunch of facts.

Anyway, I noticed over the past week that the book has just been short-listed for the BC prize and long-listed for the Charles Taylor Prize, so I figured I'd put a review up. The nominations are well-deserved.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars One that you'll pass around, Dec 27 2011
By 
Jonathan Clark "DJ Bolivia" (Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Eating Dirt (Hardcover)
As a tree planter myself of over twenty years (see the Replant website), I loved this book. But even if I wasn't a planter, I think I would have really enjoyed it. Despite my own lengthy time in silviculture, I actually learned a lot about the logging side of the industry by reading this one. I think this is a book that you'll share ... my parents have both read it now too, and they also enjoyed it. As has been said already, this one is very well-written.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Insiders perspective, Dec 12 2011
This review is from: Eating Dirt (Hardcover)
Being someone who has worked with the Author and most of the characters in the book. I found this book to be a very well written, accurate, account of life as a professional treeplanter. Couldn't put it down.
It is like having a memoir of my experiences working the coast of B.C. and I will cherish this book forever. Thanks Charolette.
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