Breaking clean / Judy Blunt.
Record details
- ISBN: 9780375401312 (alk. paper)
- ISBN: 0375401318 (alk. paper)
- Physical Description: xi, 303 p. : ill ; 22 cm.
- Edition: 1st ed.
- Publisher: New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 2002.
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | Blunt, Judy. Women ranchers > Montana > Biography. Ranch life > Montana. Montana > Biography. |
Available copies
- 3 of 3 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
- 1 of 1 copy available at Nakusp Public Library.
Holds
- 0 current holds with 3 total copies.
Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Holdable? | Status | Due Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nakusp Public Library | LP 920 BLU (Text) | 35160000474362 | Large Print | Volume hold | Available | - |
- Book News : Book News Reviews
In this award-winning memoir of growing up female on Montana ranches (shown on a map), Blunt traces several generations of her family, her early marriage and divorce, and "breaking clean" of myths of rugged individualism to find a place of her own where women can have a voice beyond being capable helpmates. Several chapters were originally published in modified form in literary journals. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com) - Booklist Reviews : Booklist Monthly Selections - #1 January 2002
This is the resilient Blunt's chronicle of the hardships, anguish, and stubborn determination of ranch life in wind-scoured Montana. Born in 1954 and raised in a rural area, Blunt became intimate with the ways of cattle, horses, rattlesnakes, fire, and snow as she learned the rules of brute survival at home and a bit of book learning in a one-room schoolhouse until she left home at 13 to attend high school in town. Scrappy and independent, she recognized early on the appalling unfairness of women's lives, yet she married a rancher instead of attending college, signing on for a regime of relentless, self-sacrificing toil. As she looks back at her grueling, sometimes glorious, often terrifying experiences, she dissolves the romantic myths that shroud what is in fact a perpetually embattled way of life, one she both reveres and reviles. Hopefully, Blunt will keep honing her keen and poetic awareness, steely candor, and commanding storytelling skills and continue telling the true story of women in the West. ((Reviewed January 1 & 15, 2002)) Copyright 2002 Booklist Reviews - BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2002 February
Riding herd with the women of the WestCity slickers take heed: here's the real lowdown on the ranching life - from a woman's perspective. Judy Blunt's new memoir Breaking Clean debunks the romance surrounding the American West's most archetypal way of life, so well-known for its lone cowboys and rugged independence, its refusal to bow to the corporate gods.
Raised on the lonely plains of Montana, Blunt grew up far from shopping centers, hospitals, even schools. She learned firsthand the glories of being a cowboy, as well as the dark side of the trade. For Blunt, the dark side often loomed much larger. As a girl, she learned to round up cattle along with her brother. Yet when she looked around at the windy plains she loved so much, she understood that the land would never belong to her, and that she would never be regarded as a true equal in its work. The nearest public high school was so far from her family's ranch that she had to board with another family to get her diploma. During her first year in high school, she was nearly raped by the boy she was dating.
As a young wife, Blunt started out with the naive hope of a partnership in her husband's ranch. Fresh from her honeymoon, however, it became clear that her father-in-law, who still held the ranch title, meant to instruct her in every detail of her existence. In one of the book's most memorable passages, Blunt's mother-in-law drops in with Blunt's receipt from the grocery store and goes over almost every item, explaining how she could have saved money. When she buys a typewriter and begins to write, her father-in-law destroys the machine because she is late serving lunch to the ranch work crew.
Ranch women have their own breed of feminism - if feminism comes down to sheer toughness, Blunt indicates. They ride herd alongside their husbands and fathers, as needed, then retire to the kitchen where men never share in the domestic chores. And yet, if Blunt's portrait is true, these women are as economically disenfranchised as the Bennet girls in Pride and Prejudice. They have no real share of their father's estate, and when they marry, they depend completely on the good will of their new relatives by marriage. Small wonder then, that for Blunt, "breaking clean" became the only option.
Copyright 2002 BookPage Reviews
- BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2003 January
Breaking CleanMontana native Blunt makes a strong debut with this memoir of life on a cattle ranch during the 1950s and '60s. Raised in a rural area with no running water, the author was early initiated into the harsh realities of ranching, tackling chores and attending a one-room school. Unwillingly, she adhered to established gender roles, marrying a man from a neighboring homestead and trying to be a suitable wife. But after 12 years of marriage and the birth of three children, Blunt decided to follow her dream of becoming a writer. She said goodbye to the farm, enrolled in college and began composing award-winning verse. Her memoir reflects her penchant for the poetic. It's beautifully written, full of unforgettable anecdotes about the severity of Montana living and the constraints of being a female in a man's world. It's also proof that you can't keep a good woman down. A reading group guide is available in print and online at www.vintagebooks.com/read. Copyright 2003 BookPage Reviews
- Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2001 November #2
A memoir of growing up a cattleman's daughter in northeastern Montana in the 1950s and '60s.The life of someone who lives off the land provides rich material for any writer, and newcomer Blunt, born in 1954, could have chosen any of a number of approaches in recalling her own. Memorable incidents from childhood on her father's hardpan ranch include a 36-hour blizzard that froze the extremities off some of his cattle. She got her formal education in a one-room grammar schoolhouse and completed it by moving to the nearest town and boarding in an upstairs bedroom at Mrs. Crowder's, where Blunt's older brother shared a basement room with another student from an outlying ranch. Blunt fumbled toward adulthood and womanhood in a world where gender roles had remained constant for generations; meanwhile, late-'60s pressures infiltrated her remote corner of the country. At 18, she married a rancher and Vietnam vet 12 years her senior; she bore him three children. In 1986, at age 32, newly divorced and with more lifetimes of experiences to her credit than most, she and her kids moved to Missoula, where she continued her education. No biographical sketch of Blunt, however, can convey the depth of this literary achievement. Each of the 13 sections here stands on its own: substantial, powerful segments of writing organized around some larger theme. They read like something out of the late-19th century, particularly those years when only the novel could bridge the disjunctions between society and self. Inheriting the literary territory previously claimed by Ingalls Wilder and Cather, Blunt (who's just been named a Whiting Writer's Award recipient) builds on their accomplishments, yet marks American literature in her own way. To shoehorn this into mere category or classification is to insult its power.Profound, and profoundly moving. Copyright Kirkus 2001 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved - Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2002 January #1
Blunt was raised on a ranch in Montana, miles from the nearest town, and attended a one-room school where she and her siblings made up the majority of the students. On the ranch, she learned how to handle the day-to-day work of farm life and to remain in a subservient role to men. Eventually, after marriage and children, she abandoned ranch life for college and began writing award-winning poetry. In this nonfiction debut, Blunt proves to be a skillful writer, using beautiful prose to describe how she learned to survive in what remains a man's world. Unfortunately, she does not discuss in enough detail how the ranch life shaped her and made her want to "break clean." Thus, though her narrative is enjoyable to read, it carries no social implications. Collections with material on farm life or women in nontraditional careers will want to consider this title. Otherwise, this is not a necessary purchase. Danna Bell-Russel, Library of Congress Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information. - Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2001 November #3
Poet and essayist Blunt grew up on a Montana cattle ranch in the 1950s and 60s, where "indoor plumbing" meant a door on the privy and "running water" was a fast ranch wife with two buckets. A natural tomboy, happiest around animals, Blunt dreaded leaving childhood. The gender rules of ranch life were unyielding: women married and kept to their kitchens, and they didn't own property or make decisions about the ranch. When puberty came, she did her best to hide all evidence of her sex, wearing a big coat and even lancing her growing breasts, the way she'd drain a cow's abscessed jaw. After finishing high school in town she returned to the family ranch, only to find she had no place of value there. So she accepted the inevitable: marriage to a man from a neighboring ranch. For 12 years Blunt lived in self-denial sneaking cigarettes, creeping into the calving shed to do the work she knew better than any man and bearing three children who were all she could call her own when she finally decided to leave. While she doesn't shy away from writing about hard times, Blunt's attention to detail and dry humor make this debut emboldening rather than depressing (e.g., her observation that one-room schoolhouses weren't great, but they afforded unintentional exposure to lessons a few years in advance). Her writing inspires respect for rural life and its "intimacy born of isolation, rather than blood relation." In this world without TV or books, with mail once a week at best, "a good story rose to the surface of conversation like heavy cream." Blunt's own story is so rich and genuine, readers will clean their plates and ask for seconds. (Feb. 12) Forecast: With an eight-city author tour, an NPR appearance, advertising to the literary community and word of mouth about this fine writer, sales should be considerable. Blunt's treatment of parental discipline, sibling relationships and town vs. country ways will appeal to readers far beyond Big Sky country. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.