Books > History > American history
|
Buy Now
Totch - A Life in the Everglades (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,343
Discovery Miles 13 430
|
|
Totch - A Life in the Everglades (Hardcover)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
|
Totch Brown's memoirs of vanished days in the Ten Thousand Islands
and the Everglades-the last real frontier in Florida, and even
today the greatest roadless wilderness in the United States--are
invaluable as well as vivid and entertaining, for Totch is a
natural-born story-teller, and his accounts of fishing and gator
hunting as well as his life beyond the law as gator poacher and
drug runner are evocative and colorful, fresh and exciting."" -
from the foreword by Peter Matthiessen In the mysterious wilderness
of swamps, marshes, and rivers that conceals life in the Florida
Everglades, Totch Brown hung up his career as alligator hunter and
commercial fisherman to become a self-confessed pot smuggler.
Before the marijuana money rolled in, he survived excruciating
poverty in one of the most primitive and beautiful spots on earth,
Chokoloskee Island, in the mangrove keys known as the Ten Thousand
Islands located at the western gateway to the Everglades National
Park. Until he wrote this memoir--recollections from his childhood
in the twenties that merge with reflections on a way of life dying
at the hands of progress in the nineties-Totch had never read a
book in his life. Still, his writing conveys the tension he
experienced from trying to live off the land and within the laws of
the land. Told with energy and authenticity, his story begins with
the handful of souls who came to the area a hundred years ago to
homestead on the high ground formed from oyster mounds built and
left by the Calusa Indians. They lived close to nature in shacks
built of tin or palmetto fans; they ate wild meat, Chokoloskee
chicken (white ibis), swamp cabbage, even--when they were
desperate--manatee; and they weathered all manner of natural
disaster from hurricanes to swarms of "swamp angels" (mosquitoes).
In his grandpa's day, Totch writes, outlaws and cutthroats would
"shoot a man down just as quick as they'd knock down an egret,
especially if he came between them and the plume birds." His
grandparents were both contemporaries of Ed J. Watson, the subject
of Peter Matthiessen's best-selling Killing Mr. Watson, and Totch
is featured in the recent award-winning PBS film Lost Man's River:
An Everglades Adventure with Peter Matthiessen. He also appeared in
Wind Across the Everglades, the 1957 Budd Schulberg movie in which
Totch and Burl Ives sing some of Totch's Florida cracker songs.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!
|
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.