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Feels Like Far: A Rancher's Life on the Great Plains

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In Feels Like Far, award-winning author Linda Hasselstrom paints an intimate portrait of family, love, work, nature, and survival against the backdrop of the far-flung South Dakota prairie. Sixteen linked stories tell of the joy of training a first horse, the heartbreak of finding a fatally injured cow, the beauty of cavorting nighthawks, the stubbornness of her father, a rigid old rancher who bucks at old age, the deep, almost spiritual bond she shares with a friend who is diagnosed with AIDS.
“In deliciously direct and unsentimental style” (Kathleen Norris), Hasselstrom maps the landscape of her life, demarcating the same beauties and brutalities that intermingle on the Great Plains she calls home.

240 pages, Paperback

First published November 1, 1999

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44 people want to read

About the author

Linda M. Hasselstrom

30 books23 followers
Linda M. Hasselstrom is an award-winning poet and writer of the High Plains whose work is rooted in the arid landscape of southwestern South Dakota. She writes, ranches, and conducts writing retreats on the South Dakota ranch homesteaded by her grandfather, a Swedish cobbler, in 1899.

Her website, www.windbreakhouse.com, provides details about her writing retreats, online consulting and her published poetry and nonfiction.

Contact her at info@windbreakhouse.com

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5 stars
25 (31%)
4 stars
38 (48%)
3 stars
13 (16%)
2 stars
2 (2%)
1 star
1 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews
289 reviews4 followers
January 19, 2021
Excellent writing by a South Dakota rancher and writer. Definitely an author and work I can look up to.
648 reviews
May 8, 2020
Beautiful, haunting memoir of a rancher devoted to every animal and acre of her ranch.
Profile Image for Sheila Rocha.
46 reviews11 followers
December 29, 2007
Hasselstrom’s memoir of her life on the plains resonates with images I have come to understand as part of a portrait of relationships that engages the human spirit with the geography of both flora and fauna. In particular, for me, this work resounds in necessity of the human life to learn how to coextist with gaia.


“…a northern Black Hillls town, saw the temperature rise forty-nine


degrees in two minutes, setting a world record for swift temperature


change. The only consistent plains weather pattern is variety” (76).


The human soul must shift and eddy with the elements of the plains. Hasselstrom meanders with agile purpose through her life on her father’s ranch demonstrating over and over again how she has learned to interface her life with the unpredictable regularity of not just her parents’ strange ways, but with the volatile nature of the earth she inhabits.


Profile Image for Ann-maree.
64 reviews
September 28, 2009
In this beautifully written and powerful book,Linda Hasselstrom embarks upon a voyage of self-discovery and along the way, paints an intimate portrait of family,love, ranching,community,and survival on the Great Plains. It is a story as dramatic and breathtaking as the feirce storms that rip across her ranch.
It is suprising to know that it had taken Linda eight years to write this autobiography.
Profile Image for Deborah.
529 reviews2 followers
January 30, 2010
This was a book that I didn't choose (for my couples'book group). I was completely surprised when I found the setting so fascinating. Of course, it helps that the author is also a poet. She created a prairie landscape that went beyond anything else I have read.
I also connected with her stories about her aging parents.
6 reviews
December 26, 2024
I enjoy the way this connected collection of essays/stories is put together. The writing is strong, raw, and often gut-wrenching, so I had to take time between each essay, unable to read the book all at once. All in all this left me feeling very appreciative of the author and her work, allowing me to really understand a view point and experience so different from mine and yet so relatable.
Profile Image for Diane.
174 reviews
January 25, 2009
A great biographical memoir of this woman's life. It has been a decade since I read this book, but passages of the book have stayed with me and come to mind often. The author's descriptions of ranch life, the land, its animals and people are vivid and enchanting.
191 reviews1 follower
January 28, 2009
Autobiographical linked story collection by a woman who grew up on a ranch in South Dakota. Very good on nature - prairie, livestock, and weather - and also good on family relationships and mortality.
Profile Image for Robert.
206 reviews
October 23, 2015
A compelling memoir rooted in the challenges of life on the plains. You feel like you have been through hell when you complete this book but bruised and bleeding and depressed you realize you've got to get some rest and be ready for whatever comes next.
Profile Image for Rogue Reader.
2,340 reviews7 followers
November 25, 2016
Lyrical loving narrative of western South Dakota's great plains. Pain and frustration too of a father lost to dementia, without having planned for the succession of his ranch. The beauty of this place is unbounded, beautifully detailed by Hasselstrom.
21 reviews
December 9, 2008
This book reminds me somewhat of my family's ranch in SD, which is about 70 miles from where this book is set. Good writing and interesting topic.
Profile Image for Kim.
27 reviews2 followers
December 20, 2013
I loved this book - I learned so much about the daily lives and work of ranchers.
Profile Image for Ann Sauer.
49 reviews
May 7, 2014
Suprised how great a book it was. About growing up in general...and especially inspiring about growing up on a ranch in the wide open West.
19 reviews15 followers
May 1, 2016
Very straight-forward account of the challenges and pleasures of being a woman in ranching. Interesting description of dealing with aging parents. Hasselstrom is a talented writer.
32 reviews
July 25, 2014
This one will stay with me.
Resonated on many levels.
Makes me want to saddle up and ride away.
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews

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