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The Rural Voice, 2000-04, Page 54Book Review Examining our daily work Reviewed by Deborah Quaile In a remarkable journey exploring the countryside through the lives of people who toil outdoors, authors David Cruise and Alison Griffiths have compiled Working the Land. Cruise and Griffiths are a husband and wife team, seasoned writers with six previous best sellers to their credit. Readers may recognize titles such as The Great Adventure, the epic tale of the newly created North- west Mounted Police's first mission to bring order into Canada's wild west, or On South Mountain, the true story of the Goler clan of Nova Scotia, who horrified the country when it was learned they had sex with their own children. The two also collaborated on Net Worth, the fascinating account of the National Hockey League's fight over pensions for players, for which they also wrote the screenplay for the television movie. Their newest release, Working the Land: Journeys into the Heart of Canada, is a current perspective kith personal stories and anecdotes of citizens from across our vast country. Canadians are tied to the earth, even though many choose to ignore the fact. Historically, most residents are not that far removed from the ancestors who built the country. The book deals with more than just "traditional" farming of crops and livestock. The writers explore diamond mining in the tundra, fur trapping in the Yukon, potato growing in PEI, berry farms in BC, and horse breeding in Ontario. They provide complete and detailed des- criptions of their subjects' occup- ations, offering an intimate portrait of each person working the land and span generations of old families, newcomers and visitors alike. 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COMPARE OUR PRICES! - We feel confident that you will receive maximum dollars with any of • the options we offer. WE TREAT EVERY CUSTOMER THE SAME. HONESTLY!! If you have equipment to sell, one piece or 50 units, big or small, give Bryan or Ken a call today. FARM & INDUSTRIAL SUPPLY LTD. FARM & INDUSTRIAL SUPPLY LTD. Hwy. 6, 3 km south of Hwy. 401 North of Hamilton, South of Guelph Puslinch 519-837-0710 www.bryan'sfarm.com HOURS OF OPERATION: Mon. - Fri. 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.; Sat. 8 a.m. - 12:00 noon (fenced yard - no after hours without appointment) INV en -titry WWI el \ MOM el IMMO Tows A 4 i N 50 THE RURAL VOICE but the last [book] was our publish- er's idea. Initially we weren't sure if it was quite our kind of book — it had neither the expose nor the hist- orical angle, and we didn't want to do a travelogue," Griffiths said. "We started with fewer leads than any other book, only having a handful. But I think it's the nature of the land that we just get passed along from one person to another. This time we followed our noses." And it certainly isn't just a travelogue. Working the Land, which took about 18 months to write, is incredibly detailed, with characters and places that transport the reader to each situation. It's carefully edited, clean copy, with each word precisely placed for an easily digested read. Cruise and Griffiths set the stage at the beginning of each chapter, laying out a lush description of the landscape they are about to explore, and then delve into the inhabitants and their idiosyncrasies. They succeed in capturing the essence of the individuals, which makes for quite humourous stories. In fact, the audience can feel how the authors find themselves captured by our land, its subtle nuances, the blatant obstacles, its secret and most definitely its pull: "Even dour farmers, still grouchy after being cheated out of their second hay cut by rain that refused to come until too late, then came in torrents, find something good to say about the morning and the land that has held them willing prisopers since the day they took up arms in their battle with nature. They all could have done something else, they will assure you of that. But you can see the lie in their eyes. There was only ever the land." Alison Griffiths and David Cruise live on a small farm just outside Milton, with their two daughters, Quinn and Claudia, and a menagerie of animals. They have won numerous writing awards and were recently honoured with the Atkinson Fellowship in Public Policy.0 Working the Land, David Cruise and Alison Griffiths, Viking/Penguin Canada, Toronto, 1999, 350 pages, hard -cover, $35.