
Fieldwork
A Forager's Memoir
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Narrated by:
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Iliana Regan
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By:
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Iliana Regan
About this listen
Not long after Iliana Regan’s celebrated debut, Burn the Place, became the first food-related title in four decades to become a National Book Award nominee in 2019, her career as a Michelin star-winning chef took a sharp turn north.
Long based in Chicago, Iliana and her new wife, Anna, decided to create a culinary destination, the Milkweed Inn, located in Michigan’s remote Upper Peninsula, where much of the food served to their guests would be foraged by Regan herself in the surrounding forest and nearby river. Part fresh challenge, part escape, Regan’s move to the forest was also a return to her rural roots, in an effort to deepen the intimate connection to nature and the land that she had long expressed as a chef, but experienced most intensely growing up.
On her family’s farm in rural Indiana, Regan was the beloved youngest in a family with three much older sisters. From a very early age, her relationship with her mother and father was shaped by her childhood identification as a boy. Her father treated her like the son he never had, and together they foraged for mushrooms, berries, herbs, and other wild food in the surrounding countryside—especially her grandfather’s nearby farm, where they also fished in its pond and young Iliana explored the accumulated family treasures stored in its dusty barn.
Her father would share stories of his own grandmother, Busia, who had helped run a family inn while growing up in eastern Europe, from which she imported her own wild legends of her native forests, before settling in Gary, Indiana, and opening Jennie’s Café, a restaurant that fed generations of local steelworkers. He also shared with Iliana a steady supply of sharp knives and—as she got older—guns.
Iliana’s mother had family stories as well—not only of her own years marrying young, raising headstrong girls, and cooking at Jennie’s, but also of her father, Wayne, who spent much of his boyhood hunting with the men of his family in the frozen reaches of rural Canada. The stories from this side of Regan’s family are darker, riven with alcoholism and domestic strife too often expressed in the harm, physical and otherwise, perpetrated by men—harm men do to women and families, and harm men do to the entire landscapes they occupy.
As Regan explores the ancient landscape of Michigan’s boreal forest, her stories of the land, its creatures, and its dazzling profusion of plant and vegetable life are interspersed with her and Anna’s efforts to make a home and a business of an inn that’s suddenly, as of their first full season there in 2020, empty of guests due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
She discovers where the wild blueberry bushes bear tiny fruit, where to gather wood sorrel, and where and when the land’s different mushroom species appear—even as surrounding parcels of land are suddenly and violently decimated by logging crews that obliterate plant life and drive away the area’s birds. Along the way she struggles not only with the threat of COVID but also with her personal and familial legacies of addiction, violence, fear, and obsession—all while she tries to conceive a child that she and her immune-compromised wife hope to raise in their new home.
With Burn the Place, Regan announced herself as a writer whose extravagant, unconventional talents matched her abilities as a lauded chef. In Fieldwork, she digs even deeper to express the meaning and beauty we seek in the landscapes, and stories, that reveal the forces which inform, shape, and nurture our lives.
©2023 Iliana Regan (P)2023 Blackstone PublishingListeners also enjoyed...
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Droning about unremarkable events
- By Eve Harris on 07-14-24
By: Francine Prose
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Stolen
- The Astonishing Odyssey of Five Boys Along the Reverse Underground Railroad
- By: Richard Bell
- Narrated by: Leon Nixon
- Length: 7 hrs and 20 mins
- Unabridged
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Philadelphia, 1825: Five young, free Black boys fall into the clutches of the most fearsome gang of kidnappers and slavers in the US. Lured onto a small ship with the promise of food and pay, they are instead met with blindfolds, ropes, and knives. Over four long months, their kidnappers drive them overland into the Cotton Kingdom to be sold as slaves. Determined to resist, the boys form a tight brotherhood as they struggle to free themselves and find their way home.
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Should have been a fact based novel
- By Cate F. on 01-11-21
By: Richard Bell
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First Steps
- How Upright Walking Made Us Human
- By: Jeremy DeSilva
- Narrated by: Kaleo Griffith
- Length: 9 hrs and 17 mins
- Unabridged
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Blending history, science, and culture, a stunning and highly engaging evolutionary story exploring how walking on two legs allowed humans to become the planet’s dominant species.
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Mammalian Bipedalism's Many Layers
- By Sarah C. on 06-07-22
By: Jeremy DeSilva
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This Is What It Sounds Like
- What the Music You Love Says About You
- By: Ogi Ogas, Susan Rogers
- Narrated by: Susan Rogers
- Length: 8 hrs and 34 mins
- Unabridged
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When you listen to music, do you prefer lyrics or melody? Intricate harmonies or driving rhythm? The “real” sounds of acoustic instruments or those of computerized synthesizers? Drawing from her successful career as a music producer (engineering hits like Prince’s “Purple Rain”), professor of cognitive neuroscience Susan Rogers reveals why your favorite songs move you. She explains that we each possess a unique “listener profile” based on our brain’s reaction to seven key dimensions of any record: authenticity, realism, novelty, melody, lyrics, rhythm, and timbre.
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Needed to include the music
- By Sarah on 01-18-23
By: Ogi Ogas, and others
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The Great Air Race
- Death, Glory, and the Dawn of American Aviation
- By: John Lancaster
- Narrated by: Jonathan Todd Ross
- Length: 10 hrs and 46 mins
- Unabridged
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The incredible, untold story of the men who risked their lives in the first transcontinental air contest—and put American aviation on the map.
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Very entertaining/informative book
- By D. Littman on 12-09-22
By: John Lancaster
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Animalkind
- Remarkable Discoveries About Animals and Revolutionary New Ways to Show Them Compassion
- By: Ingrid Newkirk, Gene Stone
- Narrated by: Jonathan Todd Ross
- Length: 9 hrs and 12 mins
- Unabridged
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In the last few decades, a wealth of new information has emerged about who animals are: astounding beings with intelligence, emotions, intricate communications networks, and myriad abilities. In Animalkind, Ingrid Newkirk and Gene Stone present these findings in a concise and awe-inspiring way, detailing a range of surprising discoveries, like that geese fall in love and stay with a partner for life, that fish “sing” underwater, and that elephants use their trunks to send subsonic signals, alerting other herds to danger miles away.
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Move aside National Geographic and Discover!
- By Tracy on 01-28-20
By: Ingrid Newkirk, and others
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Fathoms
- The World in the Whale
- By: Rebecca Giggs
- Narrated by: Shiromi Arserio
- Length: 12 hrs and 5 mins
- Unabridged
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When writer Rebecca Giggs encountered a humpback whale stranded on her local beachfront in Australia, she began to wonder how the lives of whales reflect the condition of our oceans. Fathoms: The World in the Whale is “a work of bright and careful genius” (Robert Moor, New York Times best-selling author of On Trails), one that blends natural history, philosophy, and science to explore: How do whales experience ecological change? How has whale culture been both understood and changed by human technology?
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Eating whale with author .
- By Private Person on 03-22-21
By: Rebecca Giggs
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The Money Hackers
- How a Group of Misfits Took on Wall Street and Changed Finance Forever
- By: Daniel P. Simon
- Narrated by: Jakob Lewis
- Length: 6 hrs and 41 mins
- Unabridged
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Every day, businesses, investors, and consumers are grappling with the seismic changes technology has brought to the banking and finance industry. The Money Hackers is the dramatic story of fintech’s major players and explores how these disruptions are transforming even money itself.
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Quick tour, some context, lots of touts
- By Philo on 07-27-21
By: Daniel P. Simon
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Sand Talk
- How Indigenous Thinking Can Save the World
- By: Tyson Yunkaporta
- Narrated by: Tyson Yunkaporta
- Length: 7 hrs and 49 mins
- Unabridged
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A paradigm-shifting book in the vein of Sapiens that brings a crucial Indigenous perspective to historical and cultural issues of history, education, money, power, and sustainability - and offers a new template for living. As an indigenous person, Tyson Yunkaporta looks at global systems from a unique perspective, one tied to the natural and spiritual world. In considering how contemporary life diverges from the pattern of creation, he raises important questions. How does this affect us? How can we do things differently?
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um...
- By Michael D. Phillips on 01-12-21
By: Tyson Yunkaporta
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The Stowaway
- A Young Man's Extraordinary Adventure to Antarctica
- By: Laurie Gwen Shapiro
- Narrated by: Jacques Roy
- Length: 6 hrs and 27 mins
- Unabridged
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It was 1928: a time of illicit booze, of Gatsby and Babe Ruth, of freewheeling fun. The Great War was over, and American optimism was higher than the stock market. What better moment to launch an expedition to Antarctica, the planet's final frontier? The night before the expedition's flagship launched, Billy Gawronski - a skinny, first-generation New York City high schooler desperate to escape a dreary future in the family upholstery business - jumped into the Hudson River and snuck aboard. Could he get away with it?
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A Nice Little Story About A Nice Young Man...
- By Gillian on 01-23-18
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The Black Joke
- One Ship's Battle Against the Slave Trade
- By: A.E. Rooks
- Narrated by: Leon Nixon
- Length: 9 hrs and 55 mins
- Unabridged
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The most feared ship in Britain’s West Africa Squadron, His Majesty’s brig Black Joke was one of a handful of ships tasked with patrolling the western coast of Africa in an effort to end hundreds of years of global slave trading. Sailing after the spectacular fall of Napoleon in France, yet before the rise of Queen Victoria’s England, Black Joke was first a slaving vessel itself, and one with a lightning-fast reputation; only a lucky capture in 1827 allowed it to be repurposed by the Royal Navy to catch its former compatriots.
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Valorous effort in a dark history
- By Amazon Customer on 02-04-25
By: A.E. Rooks
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First Freedom
- By: David Harsanyi
- Narrated by: Danny Campbell
- Length: 10 hrs and 34 mins
- Unabridged
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For America, the gun is a story of innovation, power, violence, character, and freedom. From the founding of the nation to the pioneering of the West, from the freeing of the slaves to the urbanization of the 20th century, our country has had a complex and lasting relationship with firearms. Now, in First Freedom, nationally syndicated columnist and veteran writer David Harsanyi explores the ways in which firearms have helped preserve our religious, economic, and cultural institutions for more than two centuries.
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A Must-Read/Must-Listen
- By Nathan on 01-22-19
By: David Harsanyi
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Ratio
- The Simple Codes Behind the Craft of Everyday Cooking (Ruhlman's Ratios)
- By: Michael Ruhlman
- Narrated by: Michael Ruhlman
- Length: 7 hrs and 4 mins
- Unabridged
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When you know a culinary ratio, it’s not like knowing a single recipe, it’s instantly knowing a thousand. Cooking with ratios will unchain you from recipes and set you free. With thirty-three ratios and suggestions for enticing variations, Ratio is the truth of cooking: basic preparations that teach us how the fundamental ingredients of the kitchen—water, flour, butter and oils, milk and cream, and eggs—work. Change the ratio and bread dough becomes pasta dough, cakes become muffins become popovers become crepes.
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The recipes he went over
- By Tarra on 12-29-24
By: Michael Ruhlman
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The Circumference of the World
- By: Lavie Tidhar
- Narrated by: Maxwell Caulfield, Justine Eyre, Stefan Rudnicki
- Length: 6 hrs and 20 mins
- Unabridged
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Caught between realities, a mathematician, a book dealer, and a mobster desperately seek a notorious book that disappears upon being read. Only the author, a rakish sci-fi writer, knows whether his popular novel is truthful or a hoax. In a story that is cosmic, inventive, and sly, multi-award-winning author Lavie Tidhar (Central Station) travels from the emergence of life to the very ends of the universe.
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Quest for a mythical pulp novel
- By Michael G Kurilla on 12-11-23
By: Lavie Tidhar
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American Breakdown
- Our Ailing Nation, My Body’s Revolt, and the Nineteenth-Century Woman Who Brought Me Back to Life
- By: Jennifer Lunden
- Narrated by: Anna Caputo
- Length: 12 hrs and 46 mins
- Unabridged
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A Silent Spring for the human body, this wide-ranging, genre-crossing literary mystery interweaves the author’s quest to understand the source of her own condition with her telling of the story of the chronically ill 19th-century diarist Alice James—ultimately uncovering the many hidden health hazards of life in America.
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Incredible insight
- By Amazon Customer on 04-01-24
By: Jennifer Lunden
What listeners say about Fieldwork
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- "mailsarahf"
- 05-09-23
Beautiful, comforting, and wistful all at once
Plenty of authors make me smirk. Plenty make me laugh out loud. An equal number make me teary, angry, or anxious. Others leave a genuine smile on my face. Few can skillfully accomplish all of those in a single work.
Iliana Regan is one of those few. She skillfully weaves together recollections, yearnings, and truths that made me feel deeply meaningful and visceral emotions throughout the entirety of Fieldwork.
I recommend this book for lovers of nature, food, memoir, authenticity, vulnerability, wonder, love, and family.
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- Robin Kay Quinn
- 06-09-23
Beautifully written, interesting world
I really enjoyed how tied into Nature the author is, and her descriptions of forging for food in the forest to serve at her inn and other experiences in the wild, as well as life at her family’s earlier farm during childhood. She is a little downbeat but kept me listening. I admire all that she has accomplished in life.
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- Pamela C. Fogg
- 03-06-23
Loved every bit of this
A memoir of the senses—a perfect capture of an imperfect place and time. Her narration really added to the color of the story.
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15 people found this helpful
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- Dayle
- 04-09-25
Mesmerizing
Gentle ebb and flow story. Truly touching and engrossing. The ending was so poignant and bittersweet
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- Kindle Customer
- 05-23-23
The story became more compelling
Had a little difficulty engaging with the authors story and style, but became increasingly interested and engaged. She had an unusual childhood, and is indeed herself a somewhat unusual person I had to re-listen to some of the beginning, but I was glad I did. It was intriguing how she interwove her life story with mushrooms, and how they grow and develop. And reproduce. I don’t have to be the
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- sean
- 07-16-23
Lovely and heartbreaking walk through the woods
Sad that the book is over. Iliana let’s us in to her life and memories while weaving in the lessons from the natural world. You can tell that she is a forager in that she pays close attention and listens to what the wild world is saying. You can tell she is a chef in that she creatively combines those elements together with her heritage and experience in a way you would not have thought of. I LOVED that the author read it in her voice. It brought a depth and authenticity that the audio of burn the place didn’t quite have. I would recommend listening to this book while taking walks through the woods of northern Michigan if you can;)
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- rafojas
- 05-06-23
Fantastic
I admit I picked this up for the foraging. That being said I wasn’t disappointed in the least.
The narrator- author- has a quiet, almost meditative voice that kept me engaged.
I wish her other books were available on audible.
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- 906CannaCouple
- 10-29-24
Nostalgic Midwest Read
Listening to this book was a great experience coming from someone who has called The U.P. my home since 1999. It's funny how most of us have lived through similar stories and experiences.
Read this book, especially if you live in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. It's a crunchy nature read that will bring you back to feelings of your childhood - good and bad.
Since reading this, I've already recommended it to half a dozen friends. Well done, Lane.
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- LynneT
- 05-28-23
Captivating
Really enjoyed this journey, especially read by the author. Many touchstones from my youth, the camp, plants, climate.
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- Kitchenlover
- 07-16-23
Interesting story but
Clearly an interesting individual but not a writer. Some biographies are best written by others.
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