Phil Condon - Author

MONTANA SURROUND

Land, Water, Nature, & Place

By Phil Condon

Published by Johnson Books
Boulder, 2004

Read the reviews

As patiently as he searched for water on a patch of land in Missouri, Phil Condon water-witches his way through westerly geographies of land and of being in his collection of fourteen personal essays, Montana Surround. The natural world is where he lives, walks, and works, as well as the springboard for his deep and generous reflections on the importance of place. From Nebraska and British Columbia in his youth, to Missouri, to diverse landscapes and moments in Montana over the last seventeen years, Condon creates an intriguing map of past, present, and future.

Praise for Montana Surround:



Montana Surround by Phil Condon



"This book carried me into a landscape of both sadness and hope. In Montana Surround, Phil Condon writes elegantly about the truth of living in the American West at this point in time. His essays are lovely still-points of understanding. There is an enlightened melancholy to his prose, reminding me of a full moon breaking through on a very cloudy night."
 — from Terry Tempest Williams, author of The Open Space of Democracy and Red



"Montana Surround is one fine writer's testament to growth and placement, struggle and adaptation, settling in and stretching out. Phil Condon, in this rich in-dwelling of a book, attends to his surroundings with a knowing intimacy that only the best chroniclers of person and place ever achieve."
 — from Robert Michael Pyle, author of Wintergreen and The Thunder Tree



"The tributaries of Phil Condon's life and art find their confluience in this remarkable collection of essays. A compelling and eloquent memoir emerges, in which Condon's alertness to the shape of his experience is heightened by an eye for the particularity of terrain and by gifts of sympathy and compassion of those he encounters along the way."
 — from John Elder, author of Reading the Mountains of Home and Frog Run



"Montana Surround is an important and intimate testimony to one man's quest for belonging. . . . Like the water he drills for and the rivers he walks beside, Condon's narratives offer both sustenance and solace. In stories person