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| Shouting at the Sky: Troubled Teens and the Promise of the Wild | 
enlarge | Author: Gary Ferguson Publisher: Thomas Dunne Books Category: Book
Buy New: $45.87
New (2) Used (4) from $24.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 35 reviews Sales Rank: 54657
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1st Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 272 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.6 x 0.9
ISBN: 0312200080 Dewey Decimal Number: 616.8900835 EAN: 9780312200084 ASIN: 0312200080
Publication Date: March 15, 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Nature as few have imagined it: Utah, a windswept desert thick with spring, the flash of primrose, treeless hills, canyons shining in the sun. And in the distance, all but lost in these great sweeps of rock and sky, a group of teenagers, fresh out of suburban America, are struggling desperately to build new lives-beyond crack and crystal mete, beyond sadness, beyond a pain that has brought many to the brink of self-destruction.In Shouting at the Sky, award-winning writer Gary Ferguson is once again bound for the back-country, this time to spend a season in one of the country's most remarkable programs for troubled teens. Here you'll share in the daily triumphs and heartaches of an unforgettable group of kids. Witness their shock at the wilderness, outrageous with its bluster and open spaces, its lack of bathrooms and cooked meals, its absence of television, malls and old friends. Huddle with them on moonlit nights around a juniper fire. Sit for an afternoon on a canyon rim in the middle of nowhere and listen to their stories and poems: tales of anorexia and amphetamines, of depression and workaholic parents, of the grating fear that will not let them be.Shouting at the Sky is a story resplendent with glimpses into power of the human spirit and the healing that is possible when the beauty and challenges of the wild are linked to it. But along these trails can also be found issues of striking gravity: insights into how young lives can go terribly wrong and, in the end, how many of our fondest hopes for tomorrow and teetering on the brink, waiting for us to find the will, the courage to build more genuine connections to our children. "I can't imagine being broken down without a wild place to fall apart in," Ferguson writes. So this is also a very personal account of his participation as an observer, leader, and storyteller in the rites of passage these teenagers undergo in the Utah desert. It is a story of individuals, counselors and participants alike, grown-ups and youths, sharing the struggle to find themselves.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 30 more reviews...
Shouting at the Sky January 8, 2008
Excellent reference for description of wilderness therapy for troubled teens. Logs and daily activities of actual participants.
Shouting at the Sky April 6, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
For parents who are thinking about sending their teen to a wilderness camp, this book is a must. Not only did it convince me that it was the right program for our son, it truly answered most of my questions and eased some of my anxiety. Gary Ferguson was able to illustrate this experience not only through his eyes, but the eyes of each of the teens he spent eight weeks with. Each day the teens seemed to make a new discovery about themselves, sometimes positive, sometimes, not so positive, but in the end, it was evident that all the teens benefited. I can see how the lessons the teens learned in the wild would help them the rest of their lives. Highly recommend it.
Interesting but lacked depth June 25, 2006 With a daughter in a program similar to the one depicted in the book I read it with great interest. It did give me a lot of information about why these programs are successful, and what my daughter might be doing daily in the program. However it did lack depth and continuity. The style of writing is also not to my particular liking, although others may enjoy this flowery style.
Brilliant & Insightful June 8, 2005 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
You don't have to be a parent, an outdoor educator, therapist or teacher to enjoy this book. An interest in the state of youth today and the healing powers of the natural world are enough. Gary's simple, elegant and insightful prose captures the essence of what so many teens' lives are like today. And his keen understanding and appreciation of the natural world make this book worth reading. Read it. You'll love it.
A Proud Aspen Graduate October 15, 2004 12 out of 12 found this review helpful
It pains me to read these reviews seeing how disappointed some people were with this book. Not only was I sent to Aspen when I was only 14, but to be honest the experience has changed my life indefinitely. Not only is the author accurate, but by reading the book, I was able to reconnect to the wilderness. I only hope that one day I will have the ability to go back and work at Aspen and help troubling youth, like the staff there helped me.
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