Up on a Hill and Thereabouts: An Adirondack Childhood Buy on Amazon

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Up on a Hill and Thereabouts: An Adirondack Childhood

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Book Details

ISBN / ASIN1438448902
ISBN-139781438448909
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,391,863
MarketplaceUnited States  🇺🇸

Description

Childhood recollections of life in the Adirondack Mountains during the Great Depression.

In the 1930s, life for kids tucked away in the quiet woodlands of the Adirondack Mountains was rich with nature and filled with human characters. This captivating memoir contains the recollections of one woman who spent her childhood on the hillsides and in the woods near Ticonderoga. A child’s-eye view of days long gone, the book describes a time and place of poverty and hardship tempered by compassion, hope, and humor.

“Gloria ‘Yada’ Stubing Rist writes about growing up in the Adirondack Mountains during the Depression with a clear-eyed purity. The author’s hardscrabble childhood bears echoes of Frank McCourt’s Angela’s Ashes in its sensibility and her frank descriptions of rural poverty. As a young girl, she shivered herself to sleep on bitterly cold winter nights inside a tar paper shack with no electricity or running water on two acres her mother bought for $39. They made dinner out of bullheads caught in a nearby pond and found joy in walking barefoot through meadows, making mud pies, and attending barn dances. Stubing Rist’s astonishing achievement in Up on a Hill and Thereabouts lies in its simplicity and a style that heeds George Orwell’s dictum: ‘Good prose is like a windowpane.’” — Paul Grondahl, author of Mayor Corning: Albany Icon, Albany Enigma

“A ripping good read. As a girl-child of the ‘North Country’ myself, I was stirred. As a scholar and reader of women’s stories, I was engaged. Full of mischief and mayhem, this memoir recounts a hidden history of the rural poor in upstate New York. ‘Yada’ is more than a naive narrator here—she is a character of grit, self-reliance, and persistence, who tells the stories without sentimentality or irony.” — Kate H. Winter, author of The Woman in the Mountain: Reconstructions of Self and Land by Adirondack Women Writers and Lost Twain: A Novel of Hawai‘i

“Few girls could endure the scraggy, impoverished life of Stubing Rist’s Adirondacks. In stark and earthy detail, young ‘Yada’ tells how she not only survived but somehow thrived among the mean-spirited drunkards, entrancing gypsies, and oddball animals. In this engaging memoir, she reveals the valuable lessons and rich charms of her homey life ‘up on a hill.’” — Sandra Weber, author of Adirondack Roots: Stories of Hiking, History, and Women
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