Eighteen essays describe the author's experiences exploring the outer half of Cape Cod, and share his observations on nature, ecology, and the relationship between people and their environment.
Robert Finch has lived on and written about Cape Cod for forty years. He is the author of six collections of essays and co-editor of The Norton Book of Nature Writing.
I wanted to like this book because I want to enjoy the places and experiences that other people have without having to leave the comfort of my own home. Not to mention the fact that I really cannot afford to spend a week at a beach house, roaming among dunes, observing gulls and listening to sound of waves rushing up to meet the soft sand.
Robert Finch is an educated man. He leaves you no doubt about that. He uses every possible word, as if to impress the reader with his remarkable vocabulary, to write a description and somehow you still aren't quite sure what he is saying. At first I was eager to do a quick check to see what he meant by "It was a day to be careful what you asked the flounder." Thank goodness for the internet. From that I discovered that there is a children's tale about a magic flounder that grants wishes. Now I've heard the term "be careful what you wish for" but I was not familiar with the magic flounder.
I want to enjoy what I am reading. I want to be taken along on the journey without dragging along a dictionary and the internet.
for anyone familiar with the Cape and other writings about it (The Outermost House - Henry Beston, or Cape Cod, by Thoreau), this book holds little interest and didn't hold my attention. There were a couple good chapters but that rest was, to me, rather dull.