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Ward worked as a freelance adventure-travel writer for 10
years and has written articles for House Beautiful, Men's
Journal, National Geographic Adventure, The New York Times,
Popular Science, This Old House, and others. He is a contributing
editor for Southern Accents and has been a contributing
editor for American Photo, Coastal Living, and Entrée.
His 1998 book An Explorer's Guide to the Field Museum was
the winner of the Illinois Association of Museums' Superior
Achievement Award. He is one of the creators of the humor
publication Bubba Magazine. He lives in Stounton, Virginia.
To
save their marriage and their sanity, the author and his
wife sold their belongings, packed up their two-year-old
son, and moved to a rundown farmhouse in the country without
any plans past surviving the year. Living as though it were
the year 1900, they struggled with recalcitrant livestock,
garden-destroying bugs, rain that would not come, and their
own insecurities, to ultimately discover a sense of community
and a sense of themselves that changed not only their marriage,
but the entire Swoope, Virginia community. Lyrically told
and powerfully evocative, this memoir for the modern age
deals with the growing sense of disassociation and yearning
to escape the frenetic pace of daily life in today’s
society.
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