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Nature's Unruly Mob
Farming and the Crisis in Rural Culture
by Paul Gilk
Foreword by Helena Norberg-Hodge
Imprint: Wipf and Stock
Born in 1946, Paul Gilk grew up on a small homestead farm in northern Wisconsin. From work horses, threshing crews and silo-filling rings, huge gardens, quilting bees and one-room schools, township demographics changed in twenty-five years from thirty farms to three. Returning to northern Wisconsin from St. Louis in 1979, Gilk built a cottage in the woods of what had been part of the family farm. Several years of intensive study followed. The question that preoccupied him was "Why are small farms dying?" In the early 1990s, he reconstructed a nineteenth-century log house and, in 1995, married Suzanna Juon. He has made a living by farm work, woods work, carpentry, writing, and folk music.
"Paul Gilk gives us a profound meditation, eloquent and provocative, on how so-called 'civilization' has driven us, not only from our roots in the land, but from our cultural and spiritual moorings. This is a rare and important book in the tradition of Henry David Thoreau and Lewis Mumford. While sobering in its description of our current reality, it is ultimately exhilarating and hopeful. It should be widely read."
--Howard Zinn, author of A People's History of the United States