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Western United States - History - General & Miscellaneous, Western U.S. Travel - General & Miscellaneous, U.S. Travel Photography - West, United States - Travel Essays & Descriptions - General & Miscellaneous, Frontier & Pioneer Life - Western United Stat
Coyote Nowhere by Ginny Diers β€” book cover

Coyote Nowhere

by Ginny Diers
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Overview

The West -- what we see in the Coors commercials and SUV ads on television -- has been bastardized by too many dive-in espresso kiosks, glitzy ski lodges, swank dude ranches, and flyfishing guides in pastel waders who serve champagne and caviar in their drift boots. Coyote Nowhere shows what's real, all the while conveying the wonder and awe of this wild, elegant land.

And there are the people. The ranchers whose lives revolve around their cattle, their land, the merciless weather -- blizzards, drought, wind, and lightning that blasts down on a soul with unrelenting force. Native Americans clinging to tradition and natural wisdom. We're dragged into the ragged coulees, eroding bluffs, parched alkali flats, and streams by an overwhelming need to confront this vastness. This is what is shown in Coyote Nowhere -- the absolute power that comes from the recognition of an individual's relative insignificance standing far out in the middle of all this -- unprotected, often terrified, truly alive.

Coyote Nowhere is filled with verbal and photographic images that capture the rough-hewn, weathered wisdom of the people and the land.

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Editorials

From Barnes & Noble

With a title inspired by a line from Jack Kerouac's On the Road, John Holt's Coyote Nowhere sets out to paint a portrait of the "true West." Drawing a sharp distinction between the clichΓ©d West of SUV commercials and the real West of droughts and weathered ranchers, Holt's piercing work also delineates the often troubled history of this wild, beautiful region.

Library Journal

Holt has written numerous articles and authored 11 works of nonfiction and two novels. His latest is a captivating travel narrative that reveals his passion for fishing and his love of the rugged rural beauty of the West. Recounting his extensive travels through the Northwest, mainly Montana and the area around Canada's Great Slave Lake, Holt provides an interesting look at the history and uniqueness of the area while commenting on the effects of modernization and the rise and fall of populations. His writing style blends humor, suspense, facts, and anecdotes, and his descriptive prose reveals the diverse beauty of the northern high plains, plateaus, and mountains. Holt also details the way of life of its people, captured through research, interviews, and random encounters. Much of Holt's writing delves into the art of fishing, but readers will also get an essence of this particular region of North America. An enjoyable read.--Jo-Anne Mary Benson, Osgoode, Ont. Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.\

Book Details

Published
October 1, 2000
Publisher
New York : Thomas Dunne Books, 2000.
Pages
288
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780312252106

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