Books
"It's no stretch to say that Lesley's conflicted feelings about his father have colored his life and driven his art. He circled the subject in his four novels and now tackles it head-on in 'Burning Fence: A Western Memoir of Fatherhood'. It's honest and explicit and pushes at the limits of what Lesley knows about himself, his family, and the hard, beautiful land where he grew up..."
— Jeff Baker, The Oregonian
— Jeff Baker, The Oregonian
"In his first, clean stab at nonfiction, novelist Lesley comes to terms with his larger-than-life, largely absent father-and how that troubled bloodline influenced his own difficult journey as a dad...But Lesley never succumbs to the temptation of creating pure heroes or villains. These people are as raw and real as a rare elk heart bleeding on the plate."
— Frank Sennett, Booklist starred review
"Magnificent . . .Lesley tells a gut-wrenching story of betrayal, abandonment and redemption. Never mawkish or sentimental, Lesley's work makes something beautiful from the wreckage of a tumble-down family."
— Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Craig Lesley has been justly celebrated for his novels. Now this vivid, unflinching story of his own life, as a son and as a father, can only serve to increase his already considerable stature as a writer-and, not incidentally, as a human being."
— Kent Haruf, author of Plainsong
"I experienced Craig Lesley's Burning Fence as an addiction of sorts--everything else in my life got pushed off to the side so I could live in its pages. And I've stayed haunted by it, a product of its honest emotions and its honest prose. This memoir should expand Craig's audience and deepen the appreciation his current readers feel; it informs all the novels that precede it, but stands on its own as a seminal work of Western literature."
— David Guterson, author of Snow Falling on Cedars
"Craig Lesley has long been one of my favorite novelists. Now, with Burning Fence, he has written an extraordinary memoir that shows the wonderful latitude of his writing skills and, not incidentally, speaks to the remarkable depth of the life experience that has informed his novels. This is a splendid work, beautifully told and deeply moving."
— Robert Olen Butler, author of A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain
"With the redoubtable storytelling skill that powers his memorable novels, Craig Lesley now takes us into the haunting central drama of his own life. His wry survivor's-eye view of a father and a stepfather who were not up to the task, and of his own gallant compensatory attempt to pull a foster son from the depths of fetal alcohol syndrome, is family drama of the highest order."
— Ivan Doig, author of This House of Sky
"Beyond the legends of the West and the fables of fatherhood, Craig Lesley's beautiful memoir, Burning Fence, comes forward with one man's personal truth. This memoir takes an unflinching look at three generations of men as they struggle with the tensions between fathers and sons and what it takes to create-and un-make-a family amid the macho mythos of the West. Lesley's lucid, compelling storyteller's voice recalls that of writers like Kent Haruf and Mark Spragg. One of his bravest and truest works to date."
— Diana Abu-Jaber, author of Crescent
"What an amazingly generous and haunting memoir this is! Craig Lesley has given us a book that is as powerful as it is precise--a work that is somehow restrained and yet abundant. This book must be rationed, it is so powerful."
— Rick Bass, author of The Diezmo
"Burning Fence is at once deeply moving, nightmarish on almost every level, and-- I can't figure it out myself-- extraordinarily funny in the goofiest of all ways. In other words, a quintessential tale of Fatherhood in Crazy America."
— Carolyn See, The Handyman
"Burning Fence is a vividly realized country memoir. Craig Lesley is intimate with denied ambitions, the heartbreak of living poor and out of the loop in rural America, and the cracked humor with which the disenfranchised so often respond. If you want to understand what's going on in the backlands of our nation, begin by reading this."
— William Kittredge, author of Hole in the Sky
— Frank Sennett, Booklist starred review
"Magnificent . . .Lesley tells a gut-wrenching story of betrayal, abandonment and redemption. Never mawkish or sentimental, Lesley's work makes something beautiful from the wreckage of a tumble-down family."
— Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Craig Lesley has been justly celebrated for his novels. Now this vivid, unflinching story of his own life, as a son and as a father, can only serve to increase his already considerable stature as a writer-and, not incidentally, as a human being."
— Kent Haruf, author of Plainsong
"I experienced Craig Lesley's Burning Fence as an addiction of sorts--everything else in my life got pushed off to the side so I could live in its pages. And I've stayed haunted by it, a product of its honest emotions and its honest prose. This memoir should expand Craig's audience and deepen the appreciation his current readers feel; it informs all the novels that precede it, but stands on its own as a seminal work of Western literature."
— David Guterson, author of Snow Falling on Cedars
"Craig Lesley has long been one of my favorite novelists. Now, with Burning Fence, he has written an extraordinary memoir that shows the wonderful latitude of his writing skills and, not incidentally, speaks to the remarkable depth of the life experience that has informed his novels. This is a splendid work, beautifully told and deeply moving."
— Robert Olen Butler, author of A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain
"With the redoubtable storytelling skill that powers his memorable novels, Craig Lesley now takes us into the haunting central drama of his own life. His wry survivor's-eye view of a father and a stepfather who were not up to the task, and of his own gallant compensatory attempt to pull a foster son from the depths of fetal alcohol syndrome, is family drama of the highest order."
— Ivan Doig, author of This House of Sky
"Beyond the legends of the West and the fables of fatherhood, Craig Lesley's beautiful memoir, Burning Fence, comes forward with one man's personal truth. This memoir takes an unflinching look at three generations of men as they struggle with the tensions between fathers and sons and what it takes to create-and un-make-a family amid the macho mythos of the West. Lesley's lucid, compelling storyteller's voice recalls that of writers like Kent Haruf and Mark Spragg. One of his bravest and truest works to date."
— Diana Abu-Jaber, author of Crescent
"What an amazingly generous and haunting memoir this is! Craig Lesley has given us a book that is as powerful as it is precise--a work that is somehow restrained and yet abundant. This book must be rationed, it is so powerful."
— Rick Bass, author of The Diezmo
"Burning Fence is at once deeply moving, nightmarish on almost every level, and-- I can't figure it out myself-- extraordinarily funny in the goofiest of all ways. In other words, a quintessential tale of Fatherhood in Crazy America."
— Carolyn See, The Handyman
"Burning Fence is a vividly realized country memoir. Craig Lesley is intimate with denied ambitions, the heartbreak of living poor and out of the loop in rural America, and the cracked humor with which the disenfranchised so often respond. If you want to understand what's going on in the backlands of our nation, begin by reading this."
— William Kittredge, author of Hole in the Sky