“Revelatory . . . With every chapter, you get
a history lesson, a hunting lesson, a nature lesson and
a cooking lesson. . . . Meat Eater offers an
overabundance to savor.”—The New York Times Book
Review Steven Rinella grew up
in Twin Lake, Michigan, the son of a hunter who taught
his three sons to love the natural world the way he did.
As a child, Rinella devoured stories of the American
wilderness, especially the exploits of his hero, Daniel
Boone. He began fishing at the age of three and shot his
first squirrel at eight and his first deer at thirteen.
He chose the colleges he went to by their proximity to
good hunting ground, and he experimented with living
solely off wild meat. As an adult, he feeds his family
from the food he hunts. Meat
Eater chronicles Rinella’s lifelong relationship
with nature and hunting through the lens of ten hunts,
beginning when he was an aspiring mountain man at age
ten and ending as a thirty-seven-year-old Brooklyn
father who hunts in the remotest corners of North
America. He tells of having a struggling career as a fur
trapper just as fur prices were falling; of a dalliance
with catch-and-release steelhead fishing; of canoeing in
the Missouri Breaks in search of mule deer just as the
Missouri River was freezing up one November; and of
hunting the elusive Dall sheep in the glaciated
mountains of Alaska. Through each story,
Rinella grapples with themes such as the role of the
hunter in shaping America, the vanishing frontier, the
ethics of killing, the allure of hunting trophies, the
responsibilities that human predators have to their
prey, and the disappearance of the hunter himself as
Americans lose their connection with the way their food
finds its way to their tables. Hunting, he argues, is
intimately connected with our humanity; assuming
responsibility for acquiring the meat that we eat,
rather than entrusting it to proxy executioners,
processors, packagers, and distributors, is one of the
most respectful and exhilarating things a meat eater can
do. A thrilling storyteller with boundless
interesting facts and historical information about the
land, the natural world, and the history of hunting,
Rinella also includes after each chapter a section of
“Tasting Notes” that draws from his thirty-plus years of
eating and cooking wild game, both at home and over a
campfire. In Meat Eater he paints a loving
portrait of a way of life that is part of who we are as
humans and as Americans. Praise for Meat
Eater “Full of empathy and
intelligence . . . In some sections of the book, the
author’s prose is so engrossing, so riveting, that it
matches, punch for punch, the best sports
writing.”—The Wall Street
Journal “Steven Rinella is one of the
best nature writers of the last decade. . . . This book
was a page-turner.”—Tim Ferris “Rinella’s
writing is unerringly smart, direct, and sharply
detailed.”—The Boston Globe “A
unique and valuable alternate view of where our food
comes from.”—Anthony Bourdain
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