Colton H. Bryant was one of Wyomings native sons and grown by that high, dry place, he never once wanted to leave it. Wyoming loves me, he said, and it was true. Wyomingroughneck, wild, open, and searingly beautiful loved him, and Colton loved it back. As a child in school, Colton never could force himself to focus on his lessons. Instead, hed plan where hed go fishing later, or hed wonder how many jackrabbits he might find on his favorite hunting patch, or hed dream about the rides he would take on the wild mare he was breaking. At my funeral, youll all feel sorry for making me waste so much time in school, he said to his best friend Jakeand it was true.
Two things got Colton through the boredom of school and the neighborhood K-mart cowboys who bullied him: His best friend Jake and his favorite mantra, a snatch of a saying he heard on TV: Mind over matterwhich meant to him: If you dont mind, it dont matter. Colton and Jake grew up wanting nothing more than the freedom to sleep out under the great Wyoming night sky, to hunt and fish and chase the horizon and to be just like Coltons dad, a strong and gentle man of few words. When it was time for Colton to marry and make money on his own, he took up as a hand on an oil rig. It was dangerous work, but Colton was the third generation in his family to work on the oil patch and he claimed it was in his blood. And anyway, he joked, he always knew hed die young.
Colton did die young, and he died on the rigfalling to his death because the drilling company had neglected to spend two thousand dollars on the mandated safety rails that would have saved his life. His family received no compensation. But they didnt expect tothey knew the companys ways, and after all as Colton would have said: Mind over matter.
Alexandra Fuller brings before us the life of someone as unexpected as he is iconic. The moving, tough, and in many ways quintessentially American story of Colton H. Bryants life could not be told without also telling the story of the land that grew himthe beautiful and somehow tragic Wyoming; the land where there are still such things as cowboys roaming the plains, where its relationships that get you through, and where a just, soulful, passionate man named Colton H. Bryant lived and died.
"As a touching portrait of a life cut short and a perceptive immersion in the environment that nurtures such men, Fuller's volume excels, but in terms of absolute veracity it should be read with caution." - Publishers Weekly.
"A latter-day Silkwood, quiet and understated, beautifully written, speaking volumes about the priorities of the age." - Kirkus Reviews.
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Alexandra Fuller is the author of four memoirs, including Don't Lets Go To The Dogs Tonight – a New York Times Notable Book for 2002, the 2002 Booksense Best Non-fiction book, a finalist for the Guardian's First Book Award and the winner of the 2002 Winifred Holtby Memorial Prize – and the New York Times-bestselling Cocktail Hour Under the Tree of Forgetfulness, two books of non-fiction, and the novel Quiet Until The Thaw. Her writing has appeared in The New Yorker, National Geographic, Granta, The New York Times, The Guardian and The Financial Times.
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