- 320 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About This Book
"A memoir infused with both empathy and inquiry."
âWendy J. Fox, Electric Literature
Sarah Neidhardt grew up in the woods. When she was an infant, her parents left behind comfortable, urbane lives to take part in the back-to-the-land movement. They moved their young family to an isolated piece of land deep in the Arkansas Ozarks where they built a cabin, grew crops, and strove for eight years to live self-sufficiently.In this vivid memoir Neidhardt explores her childhood in wider familial and social contexts. Drawing upon a trove of family letters and other archival material, she follows her parents' journey from privilege to food stampsâfrom their formative youths, to their embrace of pioneer homemaking and rural poverty, to their sudden and wrenching return to conventional societyâand explores the back-to-the-land movement of the 1970s as it was, and as she lived it.A story of strangers in a strange land, of class, marriage, and family in a changing world, Twenty Acres: A Seventies Childhood in the Woods is part childhood idyll, part cautionary tale. Sarah Neidhardt reveals the treasures and tolls of unconventional, pastoral lives, and her insightful reflections offer a fresh perspective on what it means to aspire to pre-industrial lifestyles in a modern world.
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Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Prologue. A Childâs Work is Play
- 1. A Marriage
- 2. Reinventing the Wheel
- 3. To Arkansas
- 4. The Key Place
- 5. Visitors, Moonshine, and Hard Work
- 6. On the Land
- 7. Pickinâ and Grinninâ
- 8. Neighbors
- 9. In the Kitchen
- 10. Back on the Farm
- 11. Fauna
- 12. Arcadia
- 13. Rural Special
- 14. Progress
- 15. The End
- Notes
- Index