Search - Breaking Clean (Vintage)

Used Book ~ Breaking Clean (Vintage) by author Judy Blunt
Breaking Clean (Vintage)
Author: Judy Blunt
Book Information
Publisher: Vintage
Book Type: Paperback
Rating: 8

ISBN-13: 9780375701306 - ISBN-10: 0375701303
Publication Date: 1/7/2003
Pages: 320

Book Description:
In this extraordinary literary debut third-generation homesteader Judy Blunt describes her hardscrabble life on the prairies of eastern Montana in prose as big and bold as the landscape.

On a ranch miles from nowhere, Judy Blunt grew up with cattle and snakes, outhouse and isolation, epic blizzards and devastating prairie fires. She also grew up with a set of rules and roles prescribed to her sex long before she was born, a chafing set of strictures she eventually had no choice but to flee, taking along three children and leaving behind a confused husband and the only life she’d ever known. Gritty, lyrical, unsentimental and wise, Breaking Clean is at once informed by the myths of the West and powerful enough to break them down.

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Genres:
Other Versions of this Book: Hardcover


Top Member Reviews

Kay P. from CHARLESTOWN, NH wrote on 4/12/2007...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

I really liked this book. About a womans strength in a non traditional role as a farmer.

Jennifer R. (Kittymama) from SAINT CHARLES, MO wrote on 11/3/2006...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

I loved this book. It was fascinating to read about her life.

From Publishers Weekly
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.

Missy B. (k9kutter64) from GARNER, NC wrote on 9/24/2006...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

I found this book to be somewhat depressing......