Christopher Camuto
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Christopher Camuto is a writer and outdoorsman whose work focuses primarily on the natural environment. He is the author of a nonfiction trilogy on the southern Appalachian Mountains that includes A Fly Fisherman’s Blue Ridge, Another Country: Journeying Toward the Cherokee Mountains, and Hunting from Home: A Year Afield in the Blue Ridge Mountains.
His second book, Another Country, is perhaps his most complex, interweaving historical accounts of the southern Appalachians, reflections on the Cherokee language and its relationship to the landscape, and an account of efforts to reintroduce the endangered red wolf into Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
Camuto’s work has also appeared in a number of outdoor and sporting journals including Field & Stream, Sierra, Sports Afield, Wilderness, and Trout. He also has served as book reviewer for Gray’s Sporting Journal and Audubon. He received a Ph.D. in English from the University of Virginia and lived for many years in Virginia's Blue Ridge Mountains. He currently teaches creative writing at Bucknell University.
Camuto's parents Mary Camuto and Anthony Camuto live in Virginia, along with his sister Kathi Dubovsky, brother-in-law Jim, and nieces and nephews Elizabeth, Michael, and Kevin. He has two other sisters, Mary Camuto, who lives in Washington, D.C., and Patricia Camuto, who lives with her husband Doug Bilinski and children Cheryl, Katie, and Alyssa in Connecticut.
[edit] Bibliography
- (2007). "Christopher Camuto." Bucknell.edu. Retrieved September 11.
- (2003). "Getting in Touch With Woodland Heritage." New York Times. September 12.
- Washabaugh, William and Catherine Washabaugh (2000). Deep Trout: Angling in Popular Culture. New York: Berg.