From the moment Daniel Boone first "gained the summit of a
commanding ridge, and...beheld the ample plains, the beauteous
tracts below," generations of Kentuckians have developed rich and
enduring relationships with the land that surrounds them. Of Woods
& Waters: A Kentucky Outdoors Reader is filled with loving
tributes, written across the Commonwealth's two centuries, offered
in celebration of Kentucky's widely varied environmental wonders
that nurture both life and art.
Ron Ellis, an outdoors enthusiast and noted writer, has gathered
art, fiction, personal essays and poetry from many of Kentucky's
best-known authors for this comprehensive collection. The anthology
begins with famed illustrator John James Audubon's eloquent account
of extracting catfish from the Ohio River and progresses through
over fifty contributions by both established and emerging writers.
Covering two hundred years of hunting, fishing, camping, cooking,
hiking, and canoeing in Kentucky's woods and waters, these classic
and original works show how writers have, as celebrated Kentucky
historian Thomas D. Clark suggests, "fallen under the spell of the
land."
Of Woods & Waters does not merely recount fond memories.
Many authors presented in this collection echo the sentiments of
the award-winning novelist and essayist Barbara Kingsolver, who
writes, "Much of what I know about life, and almost everything I
believe about the way I want to live, was formed in those woods"
adjacent to her birthplace in Nicholas County, Kentucky. The works
collected in Of Woods & Waters serve to honor and defend what
many recognize as a sadly declining way of life, one born out of
genuine reverence for the beauty and bounty of nature.
The contributions of Wendell Berry, Janice Holt Giles, Bobbie
Ann Mason, Jesse Stuart, James Still, Robert Penn Warren, James
Baker Hall, Silas House, and other esteemed authors examine the
delicate balances that must be struck between humanity and nature,
between progress and sustainable living. While raising these
crucial questions, these writings center on connections among
friends and family in Kentucky's beautiful natural surroundings.
The authors spin tales of the whistling wings of ducks overhead,
the heart-pounding excitement of a white-tailed buck's sudden
appearance, the joy of childhood plunges into cold lake waters
after hours of climbing trees, and the thrill of watching sons and
daughters catch their first fish. In these writings, the bountiful
Kentucky wilderness that first captivated frontier settlers remains
vibrantly alive.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!