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Cover of You're Not Lost if You Can Still See the Truck: The Further Adventures of America's Everyman Outdoorsman

You're Not Lost if You Can Still See the Truck: The Further Adventures of America's Everyman Outdoorsman

✍ Scribed by Heavey, Bill


Book ID
100590574
Publisher
Atlantic Monthly Press
Year
2014
Tongue
en-US
Weight
236 KB
Edition
First edition
Category
Fiction
City
New York
ISBN-13
9788002374442

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Humorous, insightful essays on outdoor life from the renowned contributor and editor of Field & Stream—“one of the best magazine writers in America” ( The Wall Street Journal ).

Living the life of an outdoorsman doesn’t necessarily take skill. After more than two decades of writing about his adventures (and misadventures), Bill Heavey has proven that being a true outdoorsman just takes enthusiasm, determination, and a willingness to, occasionally, make a fool of oneself.

You’re Not Lost If You Can Still See the Truck gathers together more than sixty of Heavey’s best stories from his work in Field & Stream, The Washington Post , and The Washingtonian. Including retellings of his adventures hunting ants in the urban jungles of Washington, DC; braving freezing winter expeditions in Eastern Alaska; attempting to impress ladies by immediately flipping over his canoe; and planning deer hunts around dad-duties, these tales are chock full of life, insight, and, of course, hilarity.

Here is a far-ranging and enlightening volume that traces a life lived outdoors, for better or for worse.

“To the list of great Field & Stream essayists . . . add the name Bill Heavey. His writing is funny, poignant, acerbic, and, best of all, always alert to the absurdities of life.” —Patrick C. McManus **

Review

"I had never heard of Bill Heavey until an editor asked me to review his latest collection of essays, most of which originally appeared in Field & Stream. Now, I can't imagine not reading his magazine columns, which are nominally about hunting and fishing, but are really about life. The title of his latest book alone is almost worth the price: "You're Not Lost if You Can Still See the Truck."" -- The Advocate

“Bill Heavey is one of the best magazine writers in America. No, he doesn’t work for the New Yorker. He writes for Field & Stream, the popular journal for hunters and fishermen. Outdoor writing has a dim reputation as a soapbox for braggarts who crow about hooking a monster marlin or bagging a 24-point deer. But Mr. Heavey will have none of that. . . . Not since Jack London’s stories has the stark danger of freezing lived so largely on the page. . . . . As the tongue-in-cheek title of Mr. Heavey’s collection suggests, this isn’t always or even usually a serious book. Think Erma Bombeck in camo gear, and you’ll get the sensibility of many of these pieces.” *Wall Street Journal *

“A reader doesn’t have to hunt or fish to appreciate Heavey’s gift for storytelling. . . . The best essays, here, in fact, are heartbreakingly tender. . . . This is a hard book to classify, and that’s its biggest strength.” Christian Science Monitor , “10 excellent books you might have missed in 2014”

“Remarkably engaging and often hilarious. . . . Even those who have never baited a hook, assembled a tree stand, or sat in a duck blind will quickly find themselves drawn into Heavey’s world with colorful—and occasionally dangerous—accounts of outdoor life.” Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“To the list of great Field & Stream essayists . . . add the name Bill Heavey. His writing is funny, poignant, acerbic, and best of all, always alert to the absurdities of life.” —Patrick C. McManus

“Bill Heavey is the man who put the ‘lure’ in failure. He’s my kind of fisherman, deer hunter, and wing shot. Which is to say the, um, very amateur kind. But who wants to hear about some braggart’s cast and blast triumphs when you can hear about Bill catching a 14-inch largemouth bass on a pink Shakespeare Ladies’ Spincast Combo? Even I have never done that. At least not sober.” —P. J. O’Rourke

“I’ve read Bill Heavey’s page since the earliest days of my career. He’s one of my all-time favorite writers. He’s funny, fearless and always up for anything. If he could fish as well as he writes, I’d be in trouble. Fortunately, he can’t.” —Kevin VanDam, winningest professional bass angler of all time

“[Heavey’s] self-deprecating tales make us laugh. . . . [He] writes about the good times as well as the demons of his outdoor life. Some chapters are for soul-searching, not just fun and games.” *Cleveland Plain Dealer *

“Humorous and thought-provoking essays on what it means to be an outdoorsman. . . . Readers will sense that it’s possible to fail at your mission and still have a grand time if you don’t take yourself too seriously.” *Kirkus Reviews *

“Bill Heavey isn’t just one of my favorite writers, though he is. He’s also one of my heroes, proof that you can make an adult living by being witty, insightful and spending an awful lot of time outdoors. That’s the dream, and it’s chronicled in this book. Buy three copies.” —Tucker Carlson

“If you think of Bill Heavey as ‘just’ a humorist, you'll be selling him short, but it's his intelligent, unforced humor that hits you first and stays with you the longest.” —John Gierach, author of At the Grave of the Unknown Fisherman and All Fishermen Are Liars

“Bill Heavey is James Thurber in camouflage overalls, an unrelenting geyser of slapstick comedy and serrated wit. If he doesn’t make you laugh, consult a coroner.” *—Jonathan Miles, author of Dear American Airlines *

“Heavey examines an eclectic variety of topics, from hunting to fishing to relationships and even life’s more profound mysteries. His perspective is that of a devoted, if not always expert, outdoorsman. If in doubt, he makes fun of himself. . . . Fellow outdoorspeople are the target audience, but the overall quality of the writing may draw even stay-at-homes.” *Booklist *

“Bill Heavey has become famous as America’s everyman outdoorsman, unafraid to draw attention to his many and varied failures—from sporting French lavender deodorant to scaring a UPS man half to death while bowhunting in his front yard.” —DL-Online

From the Inside Flap

In two decades at Field & Stream, the nation's biggest outdoor magazine, Bill Heavey has become America's everyman outdoorsman.

Why? Because he believes that "hunting and fishing are too important and too much fun to be left to the experts." Because he believes that enthusiasm trumps skill. And because he was born with a skewed perspective and the inability to take anything--himself included--seriously.

When he forgets his hat on a freezing winter hunt he improvises, cutting open the juice-stained plush golden retriever puppy his daughter left in the car and using that as head- gear. Trying to impress a lady, he flips his canoe and loses everything in the boat. When ants invade his home, he arms himself with a caulk gun and--over the course of an epic battle-- develops a grudging respect for his enemy.

Heavey buys the ticket, takes the ride. And takes you along with him. He nearly freezes to death in 30-below cold after becoming lost while profiling a trapper in the Alaskan tundra. In Nicaragua, where he discovers an untapped tarpon paradise, he also finds beer that comes
"with a napkin over the mouth of the bottle and a straw poked through the napkin, the local version of bug armor." Throughout, he is alive both to the ridiculousness and poignancy of life.

You're Not Lost if You Can Still See the Truck collects more than sixty of Heavey's best stories from over two decades at Field & Stream, as well as work from the Washington Post and Washingtonian. Filled with Heavey's trademark wit and candor, You're Not Lost if You Can Still See the Truck is a far-ranging and enlightening read, tracing a life lived outdoors through the good, the bad, and the downright hilarious.

✦ Subjects


Outdoor recreation -- Anecdotes