The Wild Marsh
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Many nature writers, for whatever reason, feel compelled to stray far afield from terrain they know intimately with their eyes and heart. But not Montana鈥檚 Rick Bass.
It鈥檚 now the middle of summer and, like glacier lilies peppering the Western mountains, the Yaak Valley鈥檚 man of words and woods is back with another book waiting to take readers away to one of the least populated corners of the American landscape.
By making his adopted dell a muse for different kinds of works 鈥 from fictional short stories to activist essays 鈥 Bass has left the Yaak indelibly stenciled into the map of literary place names. His prolific prose and its singular yet multidimensional connection to one million acres of geography have caused critics to herald him as a modern version of Henry David Thoreau. But here we must ask a question:聽 What more do we need 鈥 and want 鈥 to know about the Yaak that Bass hasn鈥檛 been revealed to us before?
To quote Thoreau (who found plenty of fodder for universal rumination at local Walden Pond and in Maine鈥檚 nearby North Woods): 鈥淚t is not worth the while to go around the world to count the cats in Zanzibar.鈥 Translation:聽 One doesn鈥檛 need a dog-eared passport; a huge travel budget, a large amount of ennui, and an abundance of elusive vacation days to discover the sacred, the exotic, and the profound.
If this sounds trite, perhaps even preachy, Bass shows us why it isn鈥檛.
In The Wild Marsh: Four Seasons at Home in Montana, he counts, and takes stock of, lots of different things found in his own backyard; among them the tracks of wildcats, grizzly bears, wolves, deer, moose, and elk that have prowled the forests of the Yaak since the last Ice Age.聽The latter also give the author some of his sustenance.
As a father, he and his wife watch their young daughters pass from a pre- to post-9/11 era, though in many ways they grow up unaffected by the dissonance of the outer world.聽Their lives are sculpted by the same phenomena that carved out the rugged physical terrain that engulfs them.
Rummaging through the understories of ancient trees and boulder-strewn river washes, set, in turn, against the profile of his family members, Bass responds to nuanced changes wrought by humans and climate in the natural panorama around him 鈥 some that he can effect, others beyond his influence.
More than 20 years ago, Bass, then a budding novelist and former geologist from Houston, retreated to the Yaak in strident pursuit of isolation and purpose.聽He found it. His obscure outpost in extreme northwest Montana could be considered a rugged extension of the southern Canadian Rockies.聽It lies along a road to nowhere.
While Bass鈥檚 earlier works of nonfiction, including 鈥淭he Book of Yaak鈥 (1997) and 鈥淲hy I Came West鈥 (2008) have, more or less, represented moving arguments for saving nature from industrial logging and mining, he makes it clear that here he isn鈥檛 climbing the activist鈥檚 soapbox.聽This book is more a pure reflection on natural history and a bittersweet calendar of remembrance.
In fact, 鈥淭he Wild Marsh鈥 succeeds in one respect far better than Bass鈥檚 earlier tomes. Its resonant strength is Thoreauvian; it promotes the notion that fleeting time can be magically slowed down, its essence cherished and distilled, but only if one makes 鈥 and consciously takes 鈥 the time to observe the miracles of nature that occur outdoors each day.
鈥淭here are times when I forget my fear for the future of this landscape, and when I exist only in the green moment,鈥 he writes. 鈥淎nd maybe that鈥檚 what this narrative is about:聽trying to isolate those moments from the periods of nearly daunting fear, and even outrage.鈥
Begun back in the 1990s, 鈥淭he Wild Marsh鈥 shows how Bass learns to dwell in daily unscripted events, shaped by the seasons, and how this enables him to inch closer to the things that matter, and to worry less.
Baby Boomers take note: Bass transforms the Yaak into a meditation on aging, one perfectly suited to summer, representing for him the bridge between rising youth and senescence. 鈥淢y life, I realize suddenly, IS July,鈥 he declares. 鈥淐hildhood is June, and old age is August, but here it is, July, and my life, this year, is July inside of July.鈥
Like Thoreau鈥檚 19th-century essays, which still represent touchstones, Bass hopes that scientists, 100 years from today, will get a sense of how one observer existed at the head of a wild valley with global forces bearing down upon it.聽His contribution to the future:聽pure wonderment.
Indeed, many gifted nature writers go try to find themselves in Zanzibar. Not Bass.聽He rightly assumes the role of America鈥檚 21st-century Thoreau.聽鈥淭he Wild Marsh鈥 is his tribute to staying at home.
For those who want to be transported to an extraordinary place beyond the suburbs, this book offers the sensations of a cross-country pilgrimage to a wild destination over hither and yon, commencing with snow and ice, passing through the euphoria of spring, the wistfulness of summer, and the blazing colors of autumn before arriving, back where the author started, on New Year鈥檚 Eve.
Oh, what a journey. Bass鈥檚 escape to the Yaak, once more, is ours, too.
Todd Wilkinson lives in Bozeman, Mont., and is writing a book about Ted Turner.