"Laura Waterman's second memoir, Calling Wild Places Home, embodies her larger-than-life legacy as a conservationist, author, climber, and homesteader. Although the task of writing such a memoir is formidable--looming like the image of Mount Lafayette on the book's cover--Waterman blazes a clear trail for the reader. With steadfast pace, she guides us through eight decades of her remarkable life." -- Appalachia Journal
"Laura is a gifted writer, a treasure to those of us who revere wild places (especially alpine ones)." -- Adirondack Daily Enterprise
"A legendary mountain figure and revered voice on backcountry ethics, Laura Waterman is an American treasure. Her new memoir illuminates the challenges and rewards of homesteading and wilderness stewardship. It also dives deeper into her marriage to the prolific writer and climber Guy Waterman, whose shadow looms over the Northeast because of his tragic decision to intentionally freeze to death atop Mt. Lafayette in New Hampshire. In sharp contrast, Laura chose life--and this book is an embrace of all its mystery, pain, and joy." -- Stephen Kurczy, author of The Quiet Zone: Unraveling the Mystery of a Town Suspended in Silence
"In this latest memoir, celebrated wilderness steward Laura Waterman reflects on her years of homesteading, and her relationships--with herself, her late husband Guy, and the world they dove headlong into together. Examining a world under our modern noses, should we slow down to see it, Calling Wild Places Home rings like a clarion bell: honest, unflinching, and true. Now more than ever, we need Waterman's voice." -- Michael Wejchert, author of Hidden Mountains: Survival and Reckoning after a Climb Gone Wrong
"Calling Wild Places Home is timely in its portrayal of a remarkable life centered on the essentials and, through it, the much deeper connection we can realize with ourselves and natural spaces. Through a series of vulnerable and poignant essays, Waterman demonstrates that the standard definitions we so often rely on to validate how we love, sacrifice, renew, and persevere most likely require some focused introspection." -- Ty Gagne, author of The Last Traverse: Tragedy and Resilience in the Winter Whites
"Laura Waterman's Calling Wild Places Home is an extraordinary story. She and her husband, Guy Waterman, authored the bestselling book Forest and Crag, a history of hiking and trail blazing in the Northeast Mountains. Her new book, part memoir and part anthology of Laura Waterman's previously published essays, focuses on two interrelated stories: their lives together and their experiences as mountain climbers, homesteaders, and stewards of nature. Part of the power of the memoir lies in her depiction of her husband's demons, which culminated in his suicide in 2000. She writes sensitively and honestly about this event, offering us insights gleaned from a twenty-year perspective. As she observes, 'There is nothing like the passage of time to help us gain clarity with which to see long-ago events.' Yet Calling Wild Places Home evokes the spirit of Thoreau's Walden in its affirmation of self-reliance and resilience, but Laura Waterman's voice is uniquely her own. Readers will remember her inspirational, revelatory, life-affirming book for a long time." -- Jeffrey Berman, author of Dying to Teach: A Memoir of Love, Loss, and Learning