Fire Season, Philip Connors
Fire Season, Philip Connors
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Fire Season
Field Notes from a Wilderness Lookout

Author: Philip Connors

Narrator: Sean Runnette

Unabridged: 8 hr 35 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 04/05/2011

Categories: Nonfiction, Nature


Synopsis

In the tradition of Desert Solitaire and Shop Class as Soulcraft, this is a remarkable debut from a major new voice in American nonfictiona meditation on nature and life, witnessed from the heights of one of the last firelookout towers in America. For nearly a decade, Philip Connors has spent half of each year in a sevenbyseven foot firelookout tower, ten thousand feet above sea level in one of the most remote territories of New Mexico. One of the least developed parts of the country, the first region designated as an official wilderness area in the world, the section he tends is also one of the most fireprone, suffering more than thirty thousand lightning strikes each year. Written with gusto, charm, and a sense of history, Fire Season captures the wonder and grandeur of this most unusual job and place: the eerie pleasure of solitude, the strange dance of communion and mistrust with its animal inhabitants, and the majesty, might, and beauty of untamed fire at its wildest. Connors time up on the peak is filled with dramathere are fires large and small; spectacular midnight lightning storms and silent mornings awakening above the clouds; surprise encounters with longdistance hikers, smokejumpers, bobcats, black bears, and an abandoned, dying fawn. Filled with Connors heartfelt reflections on our place in the wild, on other writers who have worked as lookoutsJack Kerouac, Edward Abbey, Norman Maclean, Gary Snyderand on the ongoing debate over whether fires should be suppressed or left to burn, Fire Season is a remarkable homage to the beauty of nature, the blessings of solitude, and the freedom of the independent spirit. As Connors writes, Ive seen lunar eclipses and desert sandstorms and lightning that made my hair stand on endIve watched deer and elk frolic in the meadow below me and pine trees explode in a blue ball of smoke. If theres a better job anywhere on the planet, Id like to know what it is.

About Philip Connors

Philip Connors was born in Iowa, grew up on a farm in Minnesota, and studied journalism at the University of Montana. Beginning in 1999 he worked at the Wall Street Journal, mostly as an editor on the leisure and arts page. In 2002 he left New York to become a fire lookout in New Mexico’s Gila National Forest, where he has spent every summer since. That experience became the subject of his first book, the multiaward–winning Fire Season: Field Notes From a Wilderness Lookout. His second book, All the Wrong Places, a memoir of life in the shadow of his brother’s suicide, was published in 2015 and selected as one of the 100 best nonfiction books of the year by Kirkus Reviews. He lives in the Mexican-American borderlands.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Will on July 27, 2022

Philip Connors tried his hand at a number of jobs and did pretty well. But his true love was the outdoors, particularly the remote outdoors. So, when an opportunity presented itself for him to spend half a year in a fire tower in remotest New Mexico, he dropped his reportorial gig at the Wall Street......more

Goodreads review by Liz on December 28, 2011

When I bought this book, I was excited to read it and hoping for insight into solitude and a different way of life. What I got instead was a steaming pile of self-absorption. Connors seems to fancy himself another Kerouac, going off into the wilderness to drink alone, be manly, and have profound exp......more