Miracle Country: A Memoir
Miracle Country: A Memoir book cover

Miracle Country: A Memoir

Hardcover – July 14, 2020

Price
$10.45
Format
Hardcover
Pages
320
Publisher
Algonquin Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1616209988
Dimensions
5.5 x 1 x 8.25 inches
Weight
1.2 pounds

Description

A Washington Independent Review of Books Favorite Book of 2020 “Truly something special and refreshing. Kendra Atleework’s powerful debut is the rare trifecta that seamlessly blends personal narrative with historical nonfiction and highly charged, activist-style rhetoric with rarely a misstep or heavy handxa0. . . Whether you’re in it for the emotional roller coaster or want an armchair view of an area of California not on your radar, Miracle Country works on multiple levels. It reminds us to hold our loved ones close, conserve our resources, treat the land as sacred and stop putting our collective heads in the sand when it comes to climate change.” — San Francisco Chronicle “Drawing parallels between her upbringing and the region's history, [Atleework's] memoir celebrates her home and the region while lovingly portraying her family's eccentricities. Her ability to relay naturalistic majesty in exquisite detail is dynamic yet tender, resulting in captivating storytelling . . . A breathtaking environmental history. Atleework is a shrewd observer and her writing is a gratifying contribution to the desert-literature genre.” — PopMatters “Atleework captures how the history of the landscape affects how people feel in the present in prose charged with emotion . . . Miracle Country is a beautiful read, Atleework’s prose steeped in her passion for the region and her striking observations. Even more, though, the memoir is important because it reveals Atleework’s deep understanding of the region, of a life defined by an absence, and she points us to the power in this understanding—it can be a tool to stay safe in a desert or on a cliff, a way to connect with other people, a call to counteract climate change, or, as in Atleework’s case, a reason to return home.” — Ploughshares “[A] shimmering memoir . . . A bittersweet tribute to home and family in breathtaking prose that will appeal to lovers of memoirs and history, as well as anyone who enjoys beautifully crafted writing.” — Library Journal , starred review “[A] beautiful debut . . . Atleework’s remarkable prose renders the ordinary wondrous and firmly puts this overlooked region of California onto the map.” — Publishers Weekly , starred review “Atleework pays tribute to the drought-ridden California desert of her childhood in this gimlet-eyed memoir . . . Nature lovers will immerse themselves in Atleework's vibrant prose and meditative musings." — Booklist “Can a book be both radiant with light and shadowy as midnight? Miracle Country can. I felt the thrill I once knew reading Annie Dillard for the first time. Kendra Atleework can really write. She flies with burning wings." —Luis Alberto Urrea, author of The House of Broken Angels “Kendra Atleework has written the most beautiful book about California I ever have read. The author locates the mystery and beauty of her life in the small town of Bishop, on the eastern slope of the Sierra, decades after Los Angeles has stolen the water. xa0Her poet's prose, on every page, honors the dry land and breathes Nature to life.” —Richard Rodriguez, author of Darling: A Spiritual Autobiography “ Miracle Country is truly some kind of miracle, combining a moving family story with deft, deeply researched history. Written from the crucible of California's water wars, combined with a family story of love and loss in the high desert Eastern Sierra Nevada, Kendra Atleework's book joins the great American accounts of the West, a step beyond Joan Didion, moving from a beloved geography into a jeopardized future.xa0 Kendra Atleework is that rare writer—capable of heart-stopping memoir while performing a work of keen observation and serious history. A work of stunning acuity and candor, essential reading, already a classic narrative.” — Patricia Hampl, author of The Art of the Wasted Day “Axa0soaring homage to California and to the sparsely populated and drought-prone Eastern Sierra, where the author grew up. Blending family memoir and environmental history, Kendra Atleework conveys a fundamental truth: the places in which we live, live on—sometimes painfully—in us. This is a powerful, beautiful, and urgently important book.” —Julie Schumacher, author of Dear Committee Members and The Shakespeare Requirement “This eloquent narrative is both a natural history of the author's home place, a seemingly arid region, and a loving portrait of an extraordinary family. Kendra Atleework has an uncanny wisdom and a deep sense of people and their origins, and she writes like an angel.” —Charles Baxter, author of There's Something I Want You to Do Kendra Atleework received her MFA in creative writing from the University of Minnesota. An essay that formed the basis for a chapter of Miracle Country was selected for The Best American Essaysxa02015 . She is the recipient of the Ellen Meloy Desert Writers Award and the AWP Intro Journals Project Award.

Features & Highlights

  • WINNER OF THE SIGURD F. OLSON NATURE WRITING AWARD
  • “Blending family memoir and environmental history, Kendra Atleework conveys a fundamental truth: the places in which we live, live on—sometimes painfully—in us. This is a powerful, beautiful, and urgently important book.” —Julie Schumacher, author of
  • Dear Committee Members
  • and
  • The Shakespeare Requirement
  • Kendra Atleework grew up in Swall Meadows, in the Owens Valley of the Eastern Sierra Nevada, where annual rainfall averages five inches and in drought years measures closer to zero. Kendra’s parents taught their children to thrive in this beautiful, if harsh, landscape, prone to wildfires, blizzards, and gale-force winds. Above all, they were raised on unconditional love and delight in the natural world. After Kendra’s mother died of a rare autoimmune disease when Kendra was just sixteen, however, her once-beloved desert world came to feel empty and hostile, as climate change, drought, and wildfires intensified. The Atleework family fell apart, even as her father tried to keep them together. Kendra escaped to Los Angeles, and then Minneapolis, land of tall trees, full lakes, water everywhere you look.  But after years of avoiding her troubled hometown, she realized that she needed to come to terms with its past and present and had to go back.
  • Miracle Country
  • is a moving and unforgettable memoir of flight and return, emptiness and bounty, the realities of a harsh and changing climate, and the true meaning of home. For readers of Cheryl Strayed, Terry Tempest Williams, and Rebecca Solnit, this is a breathtaking debut by a remarkable writer.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(83)
★★★★
25%
(70)
★★★
15%
(42)
★★
7%
(19)
23%
(64)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Stunning debut!

I often will buy a book by anyone I know who publishes something; it’s a way of supporting authors trying to get their work recognized. I have met this author, which she probably doesn’t remember, but more importantly, her mother became one of the crushes of my life, before her marriage to Kendra’s Pop and before my marriage to my soul mate. My point is that my expectations when reading a friend’s published book are low based on experience. Reading that this book was a first effort, I bought it mostly hungering for more information on her mom and that family I saw and learned about from yearly Christmas card photos and letters from a longtime pen pal. What I received when I dove into the memoir stunned me with its beauty and maturity, far beyond the author’s years. Kendra Atleework combined history, storytelling and poetic prose that promises great things for her future writing. I wish that every budding writer finds teachers like the ones Kendra recognizes in her Acknowledgments, but she writes with a voice and heart that would be difficult to duplicate. Thanks for your love letter to your mom, family and the Owens Valley!
30 people found this helpful
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Engrossing

I lived for 40 years in the rain shadow of the Sierras and fully understand Kendra’s love for the raw beauty that comes with this country. What they called the Sierra Wave we called the Washoe Zephyr, because you need a name to make friends with such a violent beast. It drives the weather and it drives wildfire. But most of all it’s big and it’s beautiful. When you fall in love with the high desert, you fall deep. The place of Kendra’s story is as important as is her family’s story, and her deep love of both is beautifully rendered.

Yearly we drove to SoCal to spend New Years with family, and depending on the snow conditions, might spend the night at a Best Western in Lone Pine, but regardless, it was always a relief to arrive in Bishop. It was a shock to see the carcass of Owens Lake, and it was a point of celebration when Mono Lake was allotted enough water to cover the land bridge, denying predators access to nesting sites on the islands.

The theft of the Valley’s water and lifeblood is unquestionably unfair, but when my young self would petulantly tell my mother that something was unfair, she’d reply - whoever told you life was fair?!! The greatest good for the greatest number is a recurring theme in the book, and anyone not in the greatest numbers knows it’s not fair, but nevertheless there it is, and it’s a recurring theme in water rights in the Arid West. “The greatest good for the greatest number” rationalized the attempted eradication of American Indians to make room for frontier settlers. The Homestead Act of 1862 offered free land to hopeful homesteaders if they met the qualifications after five years, but it was “free” because the surviving Indians were relocated to settlement camps called reservations. That said, there would be no Los Angeles or homesteading without employing the greatest-good-for-the-greatest-number ethic. Not fair!

Kendra quoted a number of prominent environmentalist authors, and if she keeps writing like this, we might one day be quoting her.
10 people found this helpful
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Kendra Atleework is a sister to Mt. Tom

In this beautifully honed and lyrical memoir, Mt. Tom and Kendra Atleework exist as inseparable gifts of the once wild country of the Owens Valley. Unlike so many of the wannabe Western writers - often relatively newly arrived emigrees from the East Coast (I know - I was once one.) who rhapsodize about their new found paradises west of the Rockies, Atleework knows in her bones the history of her subject. She has studied - in research and on the ground - the history of the original native people of the area and how they were decimated by white colonization; and how William Mulholland stole the water of the Owens Valley to allow Los Angeles to grow - and grow - and grow. She is openly heart-broken, openly furious, openly loyal to this now Instagrammated land of her childhood. If you love this book - and you will - don't decide to go visit the area. Stay home. And, let Kendra and her neighbors be at home.
5 people found this helpful
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California Environmental History

The author, Kendra Atleework, was born on the eastern slope of the Sierra Nevada where there is a rough and dangerous landscape with drought, heat, wildfires, high winds, and ever-changing weather. Yet, there is the natural beauty of the mountains that she grew to love. It was a challenge to live in the area because of the scarcity of water. At age 16, she lost her mother to an autoimmune disease. The happy family life which included her father and two siblings was never the same.

After college in Los Angeles, in order to escape the painful memories of the loss of her mother and her family troubles, the author moved to Minnesota where it is green and water is everywhere. But she longed for the area of her childhood and eventually managed to return there to live.

Much environmental history is included and it shows that the author did a tremendous amount of research. There is a lot about California history and the challenges to water rights in that part of the country. A lot of history is interspersed with her personal story, switching back and forth in time. To me, it made the book harder to follow than if has been chronological.

Here's a quote in the book from Californian Rebecca Solnit. It reminds me of what's going on in our country now: "To forget the past is to forgo your sense of loss, and at the same time to lose a set of clues to navigate the present by. In other words, forget the past and you will not understand the present."

Thanks to LibraryThing for a copy of the memoir in exchange for my honest opinion.
5 people found this helpful
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Outstanding! Best Memoir I Have Ever Read - eloquent and heart wrenching!

This book - I don't have enough words of exultation to describe how much I love it. It is the best memoir I have ever read and I have read way more than a few! Kendra's writing is eloquent throughout the book and heart wrenching when she describes the death of her mother and the aftermath, each family member "torched" by the loss, but working through in his or own way. I have read it twice now and listened to it read by Cassandra Campbell (narrator of Help and Where the Crawdads Sing). Through smiles and tears I read sentences over and over just because of the gorgeous prose Kendra employs. The book is also a history lesson about the Eastern Sierra, the Native Americans who predated the first settlers, the water wars of California in the Owens Valley and specifically William Mulholland and the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power.

More than anything, though, this book is a story about family and Kendra's unbreakable bond with her family and her home in the Eastern Sierra. It is an especially beautiful and touching tribute to her well deserving father, Robert Atlee.

“(My father) knows his place among what is larger and older than he, and it is knowledge of this role, of a human as something brief and potentially joyful, that he passes to his children, the way another father might pass on a prayer,” Atleework writes.

If you don't read another book this year, or if you add it to your queue, please read this one! It will have a long lasting impact on you I promise!
5 people found this helpful
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Stunning Written Memoir

Miracle Country by Kendra Atleework is a beautiful reflection by the author of her life living in the Eastern Sierra Nevada desert, in the presence of snow capped mountains and a glaring absence of available water. Atleework brilliantly situates this land of "lack" against her own experience of loss after her mother dies, bringing this idea of something that is missing from the microcosm of family to the larger picture of an entire region.

It is clear that Atleework loves the wild land where she grew up; within her memoir is a wealth of historical information from the nearly complete siphoning of her town's major water source via canal system to Los Angeles, to how this "modernization" in conjunction with white settlement has impacted the indigenous Paiute tribe, to the peculiar weather patterns that arise on the Eastern side of the Sierra and the impact that climate change has had on the area.

Miracle Country is beautifully written and rife with longing for her mother, for the family she had before her mother's death, and for her hometown once she moves away for college. I recommend for anyone that enjoys a stunning memoir that looks outside, as well as in.

Thank you Algonquin Books and Netgalley for my review copy. All opinions are my own.
3 people found this helpful
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A Beautiful Inspiring Book

This beautiful book is a love letter from the author Kendra Atleework to to her family, her hometown of Bishop, CA in the Eastern Sierras and high desert of California and to the history of the state itself. The prose is lyrical and mesmerizing. The author lost her mother to cancer at the age of sixteen and as in any family the loss of the mother anchor sets this family adrift. Her younger brother turns to petty crime, her younger sister turns to partying and the dad is just trying to cope with the loss of his wife. Hard times. The author takes off for Minnesota where the landscape is green and does not return until her family home is threatened by fire. Throughout the book she writes of the history of the Owen's Valley and how William Mullholland of Los Angeles devised a scheme to defer all the water in the Owen's River to Los Angeles in the late 1800's. This put the Paiute Native Americans who for centuries had lived on the land and more recent ranchers in deep trouble and there are still lawsuits to this day regarding the loss of such an important natural resource to the Owen's Valley. Shame on you William Mullholland.

This book starts off with the fire that took out her childhood neighborhood in 2015. This hit very close to home for me as we lost our home last October (2019) in the Kincaid Fire in Northern California. And there are active fires north of us as I write this. It brought back a little PTSD for me with her detailed descriptions of what she experienced.

High Desert has always intrigued me and I have travelled through it several times. It is beautiful to say the least. When the author returns back home to the Eastern Sierras she is able to take deep look at herself and her family and see where and how she grew up, and how it has influenced the trajectory of her life. This is a sad book at times but it is a beautiful story as well. Lovely writing. Highly Recommended.
2 people found this helpful
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Excellent book

Lovely book. Extremely well-written. Writer has strong appreciation for Bishop CA, Owens Valley water project which ships water to LA (and its swimming pools!), and strong family ties. She describes beautifully the outcome of her mother's death and how that affected every family member. I recommend this book to anyone who cares about saving our environment, the importance of family, and death/grief.
1 people found this helpful
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Memoir of Water and Life in California

If you grew up in the State of California, any part of it, you are familiar with at least some of the issues Kendra Atleework discusses in Miracle Country. And if you still reside here, you know how those issues are being magnified as time passes. Atleework provides historical perspective and shares her family's story in a narrative that keeps you turning pages.
1 people found this helpful
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Truly a treasure

I don’t live anywhere in Owens Valley but I love the place. My family travels 395 numerous times a year to visit family in Bishop. So many hidden treasures along the way! Kendra’s storytelling is so amazing! She describes the land as only one who truly loves it could. It is brown. It is dry. But it is oh so beautiful. The people and the places that make this valley so unique are beautifully captured in her book. Anyone who passes through Owens on their way to Mammoth or Tahoe should read this book. It will give you an immense appreciation for the land you drive through. Beautifully written! Congratulations Kendra on an amazing book. I’m so glad it saw it featured in AAA’s Westways magazine and bought it. Truly a treasure.
1 people found this helpful