"From the healer who cures a baby with smoke to the fishermen and shrimpers who have risked their lives for
decades only now to see a whole way of life threatened, Bayou Farewell is a sad, beautiful, and compelling journey.
You fall in love with the people and the place."
--Rick Bragg, author of All Over but the Shoutin' and Ava's Man
"Stunning, beautifully written, the best book on Louisiana I have ever read. Tidwell has captured the soul and
heart of the Cajun people and describes the loss of their Acadian culture, their beloved wetlands, and their way
of life more accurately and poignantly than any other writer I know of."
--James Lee Burke, author of White Doves at Morning
"Tidwell has written an inspired and sharply beautiful book. Bayou Farewell stands as elegant reminder and testimony
that we can't afford to not act. This book, more than any I have read in a long time, stands in service to the
future."
--Rick Bass, author of The Hermit's Story
Publisher Web Site, October, 2004
Summary
Mike Tidwell knew nothing of the disappearing bayou country when he first visited the Cajun coast of Louisiana,
but the evidence was all around him: the skeletons of oak trees killed by the salinity of the groundwater, whole
cemeteries sinking into swampland and out of sight, telephone poles in deep, standing water. Thanks to human hands,
the storied Louisiana coast was eroding, subsiding, and joining the Gulf of Mexico--making it the fastest disappearing
landmass on Earth. Yet no one seemed to know how to talk about the problem. Tidwell, a celebrated travel and environmental
writer, decided to begin the much-needed conversation, and this vivid, elegiac book is the result.
Tidwell introduces us to the surprisingly varied population of the area: the Cajun men and women who work the seasonal
shrimp harvest, the Vietnamese fishermen, the Houma Indians driven to the farthest ends of the bayou by the first
European settlers. He describes the food, the music, the culture, and the life of all those who live along the
bayous. Under his keenly observant eye, the bayou itself becomes a compelling character--reminding us of how much
we stand to lose if we fail to address the problems facing this most vibrant of places.
Part travelogue, part environmental exposé, Bayou Farewell is the richly evocative chronicle of the author's
travels through a place and a way of life that are vanishing virtually before our eyes.