EBOOK

Trespass

Living at the Edge of the Promised Land

Amy Irvine
5
(1)
Pages
384
Year
2009
Language
English

About

Trespass is the story of one woman's struggle to gain footing in inhospitable territory. A wilderness activist and apostate Mormon, Amy Irvine sought respite in the desert outback of southern Utah's red-rock country after her father's suicide, only to find out just how much of an interloper she was among her own people. But more than simply an exploration of personal loss, Trespass is an elegy for a dying world, for the ruin of one of our most beloved and unique desert landscapes and for our vanishing connection to it. Fearing what her father's fate might somehow portend for her, Irvine retreated into the remote recesses of the Colorado Plateau-home not only to the world's most renowned national parks but also to a rugged brand of cowboy Mormonism that stands in defiant contrast to the world at large. Her story is one of ruin and restoration, of learning to live among people who fear the wilderness the way they fear the devil and how that fear fuels an antagonism toward environmental concerns that pervades the region. At the same time, Irvine mourns her own loss of wildness and disconnection from spirituality, while ultimately discovering that the provinces of nature and faith are not as distinct as she once might have believed.

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Reviews

"Fierce . . . the most vivid ground-level report from this war zone that I have ever read."
Grace Lichtenstein, The Washington Post
"A story as raw and stinging as a fresh burn . . . Trespass might well be Desert Solitaire's literary heir . . . it's hard to imagine a personal history more transporting than this one, with its rigorously original prose (not a single cliché in 300-plus pages), emotional detail and bibliophilic departures into the musty caverns of American history. And then there are the lessons and metaphors Irvine weaves into her stricken, conflicted narrative. One can learn a great deal from "Trespass" about desert botany and geology, the politics of land management and the arcane lore of Mormonism."
Judith Lewis, Los Angeles Times Book Review
"[Irvine] braids together threads of Mormon history, her own family's stories and her quest of illumination, creating a singularly elegiac and astringent memoir of dissent . . . "
Donna Seaman, Chicago Tribune

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