Annick Smith

Annick Smith (born 1936) is a French-born American writer and filmmaker whose work often focuses on the natural world.

Biography

The daughter of Hungarian émigrés, Smith was born in Paris[1] and raised in Chicago, Illinois. In 1964, she moved to Montana, where she and her husband and sons eventually settled on a 163-acre (0.66 km2) ranch in the Blackfoot River valley. Her husband died from heart failure in 1974, but Smith remained on the land to raise her sons.

Among her books are Homestead, Big Bluestem, In This We Are Native and Crossing the Plains with Bruno. She also co-edited an anthology of Montana writing, The Last Best Place. Her travel writing and essays have appeared in journals such as Audubon, Outside, Islands, Travel + Leisure, and National Geographic Traveler.

In October 2018, Milkweed Editions published Hearth: A Global Conversation on Identity, Community, and Place, a book Smith co-edited with Susan O'Connor. Smith had previously worked with O'Connor on The Wide Open: Prose, Poetry, and Photographs of the Prairie, published by University of Nebraska Press in 2008.

Smith served as executive producer of the film Heartland[2] and co-producer of A River Runs Through It, directed by Robert Redford. She was also a founding board member of Redford’s Sundance Institute. An often overlooked fact is that she is the producer of the documentary on the late poet Richard Hugo, Kicking the Loose Gravel Home: Richard Hugo.

Smith lives in Montana with her partner, the writer William Kittredge.

gollark: The single-atom computers don't actually need cooling, but I suppose you could add it if you really wanted.
gollark: They're quite old, since we use quark-quark transistors now.
gollark: Well, just get a GTech™ single-atom computer and really big case.
gollark: I see.
gollark: But Raspberry Pis are also old........?

References

  1. (2 July 1995). STAKING A CLAIM: AUTHOR ANNICK SMITH BRINGS HER ESSAYS AND LOVE OF THE WEST TO S.L., Deseret News ("Smith was born in France to Jewish parents who left Hungary for exile...")
  2. Ferretti, Fred (22 November 1981). "Heartland" - A Triumph of True Grit, The New York Times
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