Living mindfully with nature during a time of uncertainty
In the midst of the environmental crises of the early twenty-first century, Tamara Dean sought a way to live lightly on the planet. Her quest drew her to a landscape unlike any the Driftless Area of Wisconsin, a region untouched by glaciers, marked by steep hills and deeply carved valleys, capped with forests and laced with cold, spring-fed streams. There, she confronted, in ways large and small, the challenges of meeting basic needs while facing the ravages of climate change—an experience at once soul-stirring and practical that she recounts in Shelter and Storm.
Dean’s boundless curiosity and gift for storytelling imbue these essays with urgency and a sense of adventure. She invites readers to share in her discoveries while hunting for water, learning that a persistent weed could be food, or burning a hayfield to recreate a prairie. Contending with the fallout of fires, floods, and tornadoes, she offers responses to natural disasters that reflect the importance of community, now and for generations to come. Whether tracking down a rare, blue-glowing firefly, engineering a beaver-friendly waterway to appease a dying neighbor, or building a house of earthen blocks, Dean unites personal experience with science and history, presenting a perspective as informative as it is compelling.
Keenly attentive to the stakes for our planet’s future—and the implications of extreme weather, shifting agricultural practices, and political divides—Shelter and Storm illuminates a thoughtful way forward for anyone concerned about climate change and its far-reaching consequences or for anyone searching, as Dean has, for a more sustainable way to live.
This 2025 nonfiction book is a superbly researched and entertaining memoir about the time period in which Tamara and her husband David go back to the land in southwestern Wisconsin. The reader is along for the ride when they build a house from mud bricks, grow vegetables, dig for water and use it to heat their home, restore a prairie, save ponds and streams, fight fires and clean up after tornadoes with neighbors. They also witnessed unique things in nature’s animals and found rare insects. They got involved with helping organizations monitor changes in nature near the Mississippi. Dean shares mistakes, joy, and worries as she delves into the history of the land and people, including the effect of rural electrification and changes in health customs affecting women in particular and rural people in general. Southwestern Wisconsin and the Kickapoo Valley region are part of a beautiful hilly zone known as the Driftless where glaciers stopped and therefore didn’t scrub the land flat nor deposit debris called “drift.”
I have read a number books about the Driftless Area both fiction and non-fiction. I first found out about the Driftless Area in 1978 when I was assigned to Fort McCoy, Wisconsin. I passed through Viroqua, WI a number of times. I now live on the Iowa side of the Driftless.
This book is less about the cultural relationships with fellow Driftless residents. This is more about living lightly in light of climate challenges and how it effects the area. I think of the 2007 flood that devastated Soldiers Grove, WI from the Kickapoo River. The same flood hit Gays Mills.
Tamara Dean also talks about the river muscles which clean the waters of the Mississippi and how they are disappearing.
It is not what I expected but I was engrossed with her writing and the challenges of living in a unique geological area of the United States.
Tamara Dean's collection of essays reads like a love letter to the beautiful Driftless area of southwest Wisconsin. But like any real relationship, it has its ups and downs - including, in her case, debilitating bouts with Lyme disease brought on by exposure to ticks due to time spent in nature. I appreciate all that she shares about the special nature of the area, ranging from fire and floods to fireflies and farming. Her reflections on endangered mussels and abortion in 19th century Wisconsin are based on personal insights as well as research well documented in the acknowledgements. This is a book to be savored at a country pace, even when reading it in a city.
Please note that I don't use the star rating system, so this review should not be viewed as a zero.
This one was an interesting one for me, part memoir but mostly short stories/essays, with a heavy focus on the environment. The first few really pulled me in and I felt engaged but as chapters moved along it felt like the author lost the way on telling the stories. The later ones seemed to ramble along and retell things. There may have been a few points where I skimmed ahead a little.
Overall I felt it was nice reading about her decision and move to the country to become closer with the land. The learning of cultivation and community.
I really enjoyed the essays because she was able to incorporate a number of topics with what she was experiencing in this particular part of the world. We've driven through that area a number of times. However, because some of the essays had been published separately in a number of publications, there was some overlap about when/why she and her partner moved there, and I wasn't always clear on the sequence of events in their lives. I wish there had been some explanation in an introduction or afterward. That said, I certainly enjoyed her writing and would like to read more of her work.
Loved the bits about the topography, geology, and history of the driftless area in this collection of previously published essays by Tamara Dean. However, my take on this book is similar to my attitude toward almost all memoirs (and the reason I tend to avoid reading them) -- so many words about the trials and tribulations of the author. It gets tiresome.... I thought it was unfortunate to end the book with the essay about the author's struggles with Lyme disease as it left the reader with a rather negative perspective on this beautiful area of our country.
This is a book of essays on a wide range of topics, mostly concerning the natural world, with a particular focus on the many difficulties the author faced in her attempt to live in the country. It's true that rural living takes more effort than living in a city (we've done both), but having a good, safe well for water and perhaps not making homemade bricks to build a house, along with other more mainstream choices, could have lightened the workload and perhaps contributed to a successful life on the land.
Met this author at Next Chapter Books in St Paul. She was very interesting. I had not heard of the Driftless area prior to this year (or so I thought, but I guess I did read a fictional book called Driftless in 2018). The essays were interesting and made me realize what a city dweller I am. Making my own house out of clay bricks, surviving floods, surviving 3 bouts of Lyme disease, creating a pollinator farm and an extensive vegetable garden from scratch - it's hard to imagine doing that work. Yikes.
I loved getting to know the people and landscape of Wisconsin’s Driftless region. Each essay tells its own story but together they reveal a larger story of a woman exploring her role in the natural world, challenging herself to live sustainably, taking ethical action in a changing world. None of her decisions come lightly; Tamara Dean is a highly intelligent, passionate and thoughtful guide through the ups and downs of rural life. Her curiosity and depth of insight coupled with evocative and expressive writing makes Shelter and Storm a book I will treasure forever.
Dean's book is engaging from one story to the next about an area that's equally intriguing. Her writing style keeps the reader moving forward with the rhythm of the Driftless land. From fires to floods and a search for slow blue fireflies, Dean paints a picture of life in the country that many folks will never experience. This book is highly recommended for anyone who's ever dreamed of moving to the country, as well as those who already have their roots firmly in the dirt.
I thoroughly enjoyed learning about this pocket of Wisconsin and thinking about climate change, sustainable gardening, and life in rural America. A few paragraphs in the later essays repeated information we already knew from earlier essays but it's understandable since many of these essays were published elsewhere.
A collection of essays, some I had read before in journals and magazines, by a local author. Dean lives not far from me and I am familiar with her part of the Driftless area. I appreciate her observations and her interests in land and water and the creatures all around. She writes of places and events I am familiar with but learn more from her as well. Excellent regional writing.
Thoroughly enjoyed this book about the author and her husband carving a life out of nature in Wisconsin’s Driftless Area. From building a sod brick home, to surviving floods and tornadoes, accidents, and disease, it is a personal account of living with and abetting nature.
What a thoughtful collection of essays! Ms Dean is a gifted storyteller. This is a tribute to the sustainable way of living, climate change awareness, and the sensitivity to and unity with nature at its finest.
Terrific book! Dean is an extraordinary storyteller and prose stylist—her enthusiasm and curiosity are contagious. The essays are both personal and universal. My only complaint is that I wanted to read more.
A memoir of homesteading in the 21st century in the driftless area of Wisconsin near the Mississippi River. So close to home. A good mix of environmental writing (tornados, floods, native plant conservation) and personal struggles.
3.5 Well-written essays that tied a strong sense of place and an insight into the author's personal experience with the land that she loves. I don't think I would have been as interested in the book however, if it didn't take place in the driftless are of Wisconsin.
I grew up in the same area of Wisconsin that the author writes about in this book. I've been gone from there for the last 40 years, but retain the memories and lessons learned from there. The author, through a series of essays, describes some of the wonders and the disasters of living there. It is not an easy place to farm or homestead in. If the bugs don't get you, and the cold doesn't crush your spirit, there's still a dozen more ways that nature can upset plans. But the good points.....the wildlife, the natural beauty of the land, the way your neighbors help you when you need it, are what can make it worthwhile to live there. Dean manages to express the ups and downs in a very beautiful writing style. She drew out memories and emotions that I didn't remember I had, An excellent writer, she manages to do just that, time after time. Now the problem with the book: Dean has succeeded in waking up the life I enjoyed back there, and left me with a bad case of home sickness! Not a bad problem to have, it just makes me appreciate the life I have had, and the hope for it in my future. Excellent book!