Westhope
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Westhope

Life as a Former Farm Boy

Dean Hulse

Table of Contents

EVENTS:
12/19/09 Grand Forks, ND

PRESS:
Minot Daily News review
Star Tribune review

Listen to Dean Hulse read the first chapter of Westhope.

 

Westhope


$19.95 cloth/jacket
ISBN:
978-0-8166-6512-9

An evocative and inspiring memoir of a vibrant rural North Dakota

Growing up in Westhope, North Dakota, during the 1960s and 1970s, Dean Hulse was surrounded by a thriving agricultural community. Family farms were the backbone of the local economy, and the small businesses lining the town’s main street provided the essentials of daily life. Since that time the small towns of the Great Northern Plains have witnessed severe economic decline as family farms have gradually been replaced by industrial agriculture.

In Westhope: Life as a Former Farm Boy, Hulse recalls his idyllic childhood and adolescence in a small town that will look and feel familiar to many and movingly describes his failed attempt to carry on the family farm. Like many of his generation, Hulse discovers that the way of life he grew up with—one led by his parents and his grandparents before them—is threatened with extinction. Through a loosely chronological series of highly personal essays, Hulse delivers a strong critique of the destructive, shortsighted agricultural practices and economic policies that have led to rural depopulation throughout the Great Plains.

Westhope poetically conveys Hulse’s lamentations for the people, cultures, and landscapes of rural North Dakota but is nevertheless optimistic in its outlook; as an activist, Hulse now strives to retain the essence of small-town life and to create new economic models that can revitalize and sustain it. His holistic vision for the future of rural America will inspire the many people working to make the good life—from the family farm to Main Street—a reality once again.

“It may be difficult for texting, Googling, video-game playing, and other techno-saturated readers to slow down to Hulse's natural storytelling rhythm. But for those willing to move into Hulse's relaxed and insightful realm, Westhope may prove to be an antidote to a world that seems, at times, to demote old-style values such as: a day's pay for hard day's work, the neighbor helping neighbor attitude, or the idea that the soul can be refreshed by the solace nature offers. There is nothing like the telling of a compelling farm and small town story to introduce the reader to possibilities of existence outside of frenzied postmodern parameters.” —High Plains Reader

Westhope poetically conveys Hulse’s lamentations for the people, cultures, and landscapes of rural North Dakota but is nevertheless optimistic in its outlook. . . . His holistic vision for the future of rural America will inspire the many people working to make the good life—from the family farm to Main Street—a reality once again.” —The Westhope Standard

“Through a loosely chronological series of highly personal essays, Hulse delivers a strong critique of the destructive, shortsighted agricultural practices and economic policies that have lead to rural depopulation throughout the Great Plains.” —Devils Lake Daily Journal

Dean Hulse is a freelance writer and an activist for issues of land use, renewable energy, and sustainable agriculture. He lives in Fargo, North Dakota.

168 pages | 5 3/8 x 8 1/2 | 2009

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction

Main Street
The Barn
Big Boy Flies Solo Early; Touches Down Eventually (He Hopes)
Haunted
An Agrarian Gift
Avon Calling
It Takes an Appetite
A Witness on the Home Front
A Genetic Propensity for Populism
Rocks Taking Root
The Past Is Close Behind

Acknowledgments

 
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