The Lives of Rocks | Rick Bass | Great reading but a little dark
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The Lives of Rocks
The Lives of Rocks
Rick Bass
Mariner Books
, 2007 - 224 pages
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based on 6 reviews
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highly recommended
A New York Times Book Review Editors' Choice
A Rocky Mountain News Best Book of the Year
Finalist for the Story Prize
At once expertly crafted and undeniably moving, these ten stories deftly explore our immutable connection with nature. The centerpiece of the collection is the arresting title story, in which a woman alone in her mountain cabin confronts a terminal illness. In the equally remarkable "Her First Elk," the same character recalls her most memorable and significant hunting experience. Set in locations ranging from Montana to Texas to Mississippi, the remaining stories further illuminate the consequences of our attitudes toward the environment and each other. This masterly collection lays bare the essentials of life with unparalleled passion and grace..
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Bass just gets better
If you liked Rick Bass' earlier writing, this collection will ratchet your appreciation even higher. Along with McGuane, Ivan Doig and the other "Stegner School" of writers, Bass creates a human condition and a sense of place with prose that touches your heart. And with this writing, place moves out of the west with no loss of impact. Sentences garb you and make you reread them just for the sheer pleasue of their compact, lyrical beauty. I just finished it and will reread it for no other reason than to experience it once again.
Great reading but a little dark
I've read most of what Rick Bass has written and look forward to anything new that comes out about the Yaak Valley. This collection of stories, mostly short but one long, covers Montana, Texas and maybe a couple other states too. All are worthwhile.
What struck me though was that for the first time I found a common thread of love lost/life lost that I had not noticed before. Maybe it was there in the earlier writings, but I hadn't seen it. This time, in
Lives
of
Rocks
, there are some truly heartbreaking scenes, especially in the title story, where what could have been is rather forcefully struck down and replaced by a future that looks to be much more prosaic than the wonderful interactions between the characters that have taken place.
A friend of mine is a full-out supporter of the "bleak is beautiful" concept in novels, to the extent that he is reading Bleak House now and loving it. I have difficulty enjoying bleak novels, and this collection of stories is not bleak, but perhaps somewhat tragic, and as one of the Greek writers I was exposed to in high school said, tragedy allows us to experience emotions that we might not otherwise feel.
This, then, is a collection of stories that is good for you, even though many are sad.
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In Pace with the Land
Rick Bass is a skilled writer of character-driven drama, and his works are defined by how his characters develop via their connections, or lack thereof, with the natural bounty around them. Bass can make this work in surprising ways, particularly via the eccentric personalities and ravaged outdoor environments encountered in "Yazoo" and "Goats." The winning story here is "The
Lives
of
Rocks
" in which a hardy woman must admit that she needs help living off the land when she becomes terminally ill, and must work with neighbors who have a different outlook towards nature. One weakness in Bass' writing is that his developments in plot and characterizations are very verbose and languorous, which is a feasible way to illustrate communion with nature, but which some readers might find sluggish and unsatisfying. This weakness all but wrecks "Pagans" and "The Canoeists," in which the plots go nowhere while the characters ponder themselves. And this collection is damaged by the hugely disappointing "Fiber." The disappointment is due to the fact that the story starts very strongly, with an environmental vigilante atoning for past excesses, only to shift abruptly to a non-fiction tirade from Bass in which he blasts certain environmental organizations for not paying more attention to his (adopted) home area in Montana. Bass has a very unique outlook on the human condition and his stories pack a very subtle yet insistent punch. But this collection has a few weaknesses that hold it back from true greatness. [~doomsdayer520~]
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A writer to further explore
Rick Bass and Terry Tempest Williams gave a presentation together at our Book Festival this year. The short stories in this book have been my first experience reading his works. I found them to be creative, intense and well written. There was a feeling of despair about the present human condition and state of our world through out the book, though not overwhelming. That said, these stories are well worth reading and probably should be read and their underlying message pondered.
Bass is a fascinating writer and I plan to read more of his work.
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