
Wood Work
Description
What happens when you walk away from security to build a life with your hands?
In January 2019, former white-collar professional Steve Smith stepped into the snowy Maine woods with a simple, risky goal: to see if he could make a living using nothing but an axe.
With no formal training and no safety net, Smith began hand-hewing logs into timber beams, learning a heritage craft once essential to survival and now nearly forgotten. What began as an experiment became six years of punishing labor, financial uncertainty, and personal transformation as he built a thriving timber business-and discovered a different measure of success.
Structured around the turning seasons of the Maine woods, Wood Work traces Smith's physical and philosophical journey away from corporate life and toward a livelihood rooted in craft, land, and community. Drawing on his upbringing in a religious cult and a lifelong search for meaningful work, he reflects on what is lost when modern life separates us from making-and what can still be reclaimed.
Clear-eyed, humble, and deeply reflective, Wood Work is a meditation on purpose, resilience, and the enduring human need to shape something real with our own hands.
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Person
Stephen A. Smith is a writer and hand hewer who lives with his wife and two sons in Cumberland, Maine. With degrees in History and Media Arts/Theology, he has written magazine articles, blogs, and newsletters. As one of the only commercial hand hewers in the United States, Steve turns logs into beams using only an axe. Together with his identical twin, Nathan, a former US Marine infantry officer, Steve previously wrote Men of God - Men of War.