Subscribe to Outside Magazine
advertisement
Survival Guru

Today's Question
What is the best way to get water if I'm lost in the desert? answer

What's the most reliable tool for starting fires? answer

Greasy Rider

Today's Question
What one equipment change can I make in my home to reduce my water usage most? answer

Why do you drive a grease-powered car, and should I do it too? answer

Videos Ask Dave
  • What kind of dog will make me look manlier? answer
  • Is there a sport that safely combines my twin passions for guns and kayaks? answer
  • How come most of the world's cultures enjoy eating goat, but Americans don't? answer

Online Favorites

Special Issues

Photo Galleries

share this article del.icio.us DIGG Facebook StumbleUpon

Outside Magazine, March 2007

Media: Books
Required Reading

By Steven Rinella & Dianna Delling

Larry Brown
Larry Brown (Tom Rankin)

IN NOVELS LIKE Dirty Work (1989) and Father and Son (1996) and in nonfiction books like On Fire (1994), his memoir of 17 years as a firefighter, Larry Brown captured the hardscrabble American South with clarity, tenderness, and piercing honesty, establishing himself as a leading voice in the genre known as "grit lit." His final novel fortifies that position with barbed wire. Set in Brown's preferred literary turf of rural Mississippi, A Miracle of Catfish (ALGONQUIN, $27) covers a year in the lives of several down-and-out men and a ten-year-old boy.
Want it? Get it
Buy A Miracle of Catfish and Ledyard at Amazon.com.
Each struggles with unfulfilled dreams and failed relationships, and each shares the desire to cast in a pond that a salty old farmer named Cortez Sharp is digging—and stocking with catfish—on land he's worked his entire life. As the fishing hole slowly takes shape, Sharp loses his wife, contemplates his darkest secrets, and struggles with his own mortality. "As far as he could see, there wasn't going to be any really convenient time to go," Brown writes. "So he was hoping just to keep going." Those words will have particular resonance for his loyal readers and friends, of which I was both; Larry Brown died suddenly in November 2004, at age 53, while working on this book. Despite its designation as an "incomplete work"—the novel ends with Brown's rough outline for the final two or three chapters—its dry wit and gorgeous intimacy with the natural world make it as satisfying as anything Brown wrote. At the end of its 464 pages, the only thing readers will miss is the craftsman himself. —STEVEN RINELLA

Ledyard
 

By Our Contributors
Eighteenth-century adventurer John Ledyard, writes Bill Gifford in Ledyard: In Search of the First American Explorer (Harcourt, $25), "almost single-handedly established the archetype of the restless American wanderer." After dramatically dropping out of Dartmouth in 1773 (he paddled away from campus in a homemade canoe), Ledyard sailed the Pacific with Captain James Cook, explored the west coast of North America, and trekked solo across much of Russia. His pluck, charm, and appetite for travel were legendary; though constantly broke, he talked his way out of trouble and into expedition sponsorships. "No matter how settled we may be," writes Gifford in this entertaining biography, "a part of us longs to follow his path." —DIANNA DELLING






Correspondent STEVEN RINELLA is the author of The Scavenger's Guide to Haute Cuisine (Miramax). He's currently working on a book about the American bison.



• Subscribe to Outside and get a FREE Gift!

• Give the gift of Outside Magazine!

• Subscribe to Outside Online's free weekly e-mail newsletter featuring gear reviews, fitness advice, galleries, podcasts, and more.