Solar Store
EnergyRefuge.com

EnergyRefuge.com
Solar Store
Alternative Energy Blog
Energy News
Energy How-To's


Naked in the Woods: Joseph Knowles and the Legacy of Frontier Fakery

Naked in the Woods: Joseph Knowles and the Legacy of Frontier Fakery

enlarge enlarge 
Author: Jim Motavalli
Publisher: Da Capo Press
Category: Book

List Price: $26.95
Buy New: $5.81
You Save: $21.14 (78%)



New (34) Used (23) Collectible (2) from $0.10

Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 222003

Format: Illustrated
Media: Hardcover
Edition: illustrated edition
Pages: 368
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.3

ISBN: 0786720085
Dewey Decimal Number: 796.540289
EAN: 9780786720088
ASIN: 0786720085

Publication Date: January 28, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Expedited shipping is not available for this item. Items are mailed via USPS media mail within 2 business days and should arrive 4-14 business days later.

Tell A Friend
Add to Wishlist
Add to Wedding Registry
Add to Baby Registry

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Naked in the Woods: Joseph Knowles and the Legacy of Frontier Fakery

Similar Items:

  • Go With Me: A Novel
  • The Gathering (Man Booker Prize)
  • The Life of the Skies
  • This Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War
  • Dirt Farmer

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Joseph Knowles was a forty-five-year-old part-time painter, ex-Navy man, friend of the Sioux, and onetime hunting guide who stepped-nearly naked-into the woods to live off the land and his own devices. From 1913 to 1916, Knowles’s dispatches to the world-alternating accounts of bear clubbing and quiet contemplation, written in charcoal on pieces of birch bark-set off major newspaper wars, exploiting readers’ fears of modernization. Did Knowles really survive for months at a time in the untamed wilderness without any aid, and why is the answer still so vital to the American psyche? Part adventure story, part cultural investigation, Naked in the Woods reveals a whole new dimension of our natural history.



Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A Wonderful Picture of the Public Space in the Early 20th Century   March 1, 2008
William T. Alpert (Bridgeport, CT USA)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Motavalli has created a wonderful interpretive picture of the media and public reactions to a great story in early 20th Century America. He puts the reader in the period, but brings us in contact with our ancestors and shows that we haven't progressed in terms of our love for the spectacular stunt! Joseph Knowles exploits thrilled the nation longing for a free show. Not unlike the infamous OJ low speed chase that captivated us a while back.

A good story, a wonderful interpretation and a great read!Naked in the Woods: Joseph Knowles and the Legacy of Frontier Fakery



5 out of 5 stars A Stitch in Time   February 13, 2008
Daniel Makara
3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Never have I read a more fascinating account of salesmenship in America. As a nation the US prides itself on our frontier heritage,the quest for individuality & independence,& the pursuit of an ideal existence in harmony with nature, & making a few bucks along the way. This is a true American story !
This book Kept Me In Stitches !!!



5 out of 5 stars The Fabulous, Forgotten Nature Man   February 4, 2008
R. Hardy (Columbus, Mississippi USA)
6 out of 6 found this review helpful

We are often told that our nation, especially our menfolk, are getting soft, that we don't have the ruggedness of our forebears, that we spend too much time in our cities and not enough back to the land, and that as a result we are losing some moral anchor which used to hold us in good stead. The trouble is that we have been told this for at least a hundred years, probably further back than that, and the message has not changed much, although it is a message that is enthusiastically boosted by many. Our coddled and citified society went faddishly berserk in 1913 for a man who simply went into the woods of Maine, vowing to stay there for two months on his own, unassisted by any technology. Joseph Knowles was a sensation at the time, now forgotten. His astonishing story is the subject of _Naked in the Woods: Joseph Knowles and the Legacy of Frontier Fakery_ (Da Capo Press) by Jim Motavalli. The author, a journalist who writes on environmental themes, has picked from obscurity a wonderful subject, not just Knowles but also the anxiety we tend to have that we are out of touch with natural life.

Knowles was all of 43 years old when he went into the woods. He had been a sailor, trapper, and scout, but what he wanted to be was an artist. He had some untutored skill in painting, and was making sketches and paintings in Boston for a decade when he got the idea (perhaps in a dream) to go support himself in the woods. The _Boston Post_, always ready for a circulation gimmick, was ready to back him. "Can Knowles Live Two Months as a Cave Man?" came the headlines, and though the paper hyped the event, people were sincerely interested in the man-against-the-wilderness theme. Knowles was photographed and interviewed, and given a physical exam before trotting off to the woods in nothing but a g-string. When he emerged from the woods two months later, he had lost weight, but he was no longer naked, wearing birch sandals and the skin of a bear he had trapped and killed. He had caught the national spirit; he was viewed as a hero, awing crowds wherever he went. The bitter rival of the _Post_, the Hearst-owned _Boston Sunday American_, got onto the Knowles bandwagon by debunking it. Knowles, according to the revision, had spent two months in a log cabin with food (and even female companionship) delivered to him. Knowles had a couple of other wilderness trips, and then went on the lecture circuit and wrote a back-to-nature book about his experiences as the "Nature Man". The last third of _Naked in the Woods_ has mostly to do with his painting career; he did commissioned murals and small-scale calendar art.

Knowles died in 1942. His artwork is still collected by some, and the Ilwaco Heritage Museum had a retrospective last year. We still have the Nature Man with us, in the form of "Survivor"-type television shows. Going wilderness is the show for Bear Grylls, who has starred in the British program _Man vs. Wild_, and who last year underwent a Knowles-type debunking for spending his nights in cozy hotels rather than in the wild where he was assumed to be keeping himself. Motavalli has a wonderful time with this story, and presents it in all its humorous aspects, but finds something serious in what Knowles had to tell us then and now: "He may have been at least partly a fraud, but he was nonetheless successful in communicating a powerful and useful message to an anxiety-stricken age."


EnergyRefuge.com Solar Store

Copyright © EnergyRefuge.com 2006. All rights reserved.

Information about prices, products, services and merchants is provided by third parties and is for informational purposes only. EnergyRefuge.com does not represent or warrant the accuracy or reliability of the information, and will not be liable for any errors, omissions, or delays in this information or any losses, injuries, or damages arising from its display or use.