Bootstrapper, Mardi Jo Link’s new
memoir, threw me a bit of a curve. The
book’s subtitle reads this way: From
Broke to Badass on a Northern Michigan Farm, leading me to believe that its
focus was on the difficulty of eking out a living from one of today’s small
American farms – a topic that intrigues me, especially as seen from the female
point-of-view. Instead, Bootstrapper is more the story of one
woman’s struggle to survive the breakup of her marriage to a Weak Ass from
Northern Michigan – a much more common and less intriguing topic.
Link’s
husband, when the couple first split up, moved only a few hundred feet away
from the mortgaged acreage and family home in which Mardi Jo continued to live
with their three sons. This made it easy
for Mardi Jo and her soon-to-be ex-husband to hand the boys off so that they
could spend time with each parent. But
Mr. Ex, for the most part, was surprisingly invisible even as just across the
road from his new place, it should have been obvious to him that Mardi Jo and
her boys were struggling to put food on the table.
Mardi
Jo, though, saw life on the family farm as “living the dream” and refused to
give it up even when she and the boys were largely living on peanut butter and
the free bakery goods they won in a zucchini-growing contest. She had one huge problem: she really knew
very little about growing her own food, raising the meat that would sustain her
family over the long Michigan winter, or keeping the chickens that would supply
the family with fresh eggs. Eventually,
she learned these things, but she learned them the hard way.
Mardi Jo Link |
The
best thing about Bootstrapper is
meeting Mardi Jo’s three sons, each of whom seems to have a unique personality
and a different set of life-skills that combines perfectly to help their mother
keep things together just long enough for the family to survive their
near-disastrous first year of single-parenthood. Mardi Jo, determined to save her farm despite
the numerous sacrifices this will require from her and her children, is lucky
to have these boys.
Bottom
Line: Bootstrapper is an interesting
memoir about a woman who, despite the tremendous odds stacked against her,
refuses to give up her dream of living on the family farm. Regardless of its subtitle, however, this is
a book about a writer who happens to live on a farm, not a book about making a
go of a twenty-first century small-time farm.