Lonesome - Memoirs of a Wilderness Dog
I just finished reading this book that I got for Christmas from my mom. It was excellent. The author runs the Nuk Tesslie Alpine Experience in Tweedsmuir Provincial Park near Bella Coola.
Heritage House Publishing
Charming, humorous and utterly engaging, this is a book that will make readers laugh and cry. It is “written” by Lonesome, the author’s dog, and these observations of life in the wilds reveal a dog with great character, charm — and attitude.
Named for her first home, remote Lonesome Lake in British Columbia’s Tweedsmuir Park, Lonesome was a first-rate companion: obedient, mannerly, brave, and occasionally cynical. She did not share her human’s love of the wilderness, and wore a martyred expression for most of her life. She would have much preferred a life in the suburbs, “with nice safe walks in the park and a cozy bed inside the house.”
“Any dog worth her milk bones,” Lonesome writes, “must accept her lot in life—fording rivers, swimming lakes, camping out in bitter weather and, worst of all, bears. Yes, bears. It’s a wonder I am still around to tell this tale.”
Lonesome’s memoirs paint a vivid picture of her life with Chris, but “I am not a vindictive creature and this book will remain family reading.” She focuses on events not already recounted in Chris’s books and, as she loftily points out in her introduction, on sharing her unique dog’s perspective on their day-to-day life in the wilds.
Well-known author Chris Czajkowski has lived in the wilderness for the last 15 years; her experiences are recorded in her previous books: Cabin at Singing River, Diary of a Wilderness Dweller, Nuk Tessli, and Snowshoes and Spotted Dick: Letters from a Wilderness Dweller.
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