An elegant, moving little book from the current state poet of
Nebraska that reflects the author's fascination and intense
personal involvement with waters big and small, from farm ponds to
the South Pacific. Kloefkorn (English/Nebraska Wesleyan Univ.)
cites Loren Eisley's dictum, "If there is magic on this planet, it
is contained in water." The author finds magic in other liquids,
too, "chief among them cow's milk," but it is water - and the
dangers it can pose - that is Kloefkorn's touchstone, both literary
and actual. At the age of six, he fell into Harold Simpson's
cow-pasture pond in south-central Kansas and nearly drowned. A few
years later his brother, trying to sit behind the wheel of a car
submerged in Ely's Sandpit, duplicated the near-fatal mishap. The
author writes of his youthful wonder at the family's cistern; of
watching his grandmother at a washtub in the backyard, "washing her
long white hair in rainwater"; of his and a paraplegic friend's
baptism in Shannon's Creek, performed by a preacher whose sermons
were, like "Kansas waterways, neither deep nor wide." Kloefkorn
notes another baptism that went awry, with the victim drowning, and
wonders if it "had been sufficiently and well-enough performed for
it to have taken hold and thus last." Some of the waters he treads
are larger, or of different form: He recalls learning of the
hundreds drowned in the "bespoiled water" of Pearl Harbor; FDR
taking the waters at Warm Springs, Ga.; Truman's calling the
Hiroshima bomb "a black rain of ruin"; the time he and a friend
dropped an M-80 firecracker in the women's toilet at the Baptist
church, bringing on a prodigious flood. He writes, also, of
favorite rivers, especially Nebraska's Loup, a stream he has
floated down every summer for 30 years. Water drenches these pages,
written about in a style that both immerses and quenches. (Kirkus
Reviews)
The first volume in William Kloefkorn's four-part memoir which,
when completed, will cover the four elements: water, fire, earth,
and air. This Death by Drowning is a memoir with a
difference—an artfully assembled collection of reminiscences,
each having something to do with water. The book's epigraph, from
Norman Maclean's A River Runs Through It, proclaims, "I am haunted
by waters." So—and in most rewarding ways—is William
Kloefkorn. The first chapter recalls the time when, at age
six, the author "came within one gulp of drowning" in a Kansas
cow-pasture pond, only to be saved by his father. A later chapter
recounts Kloefkorn's younger brother's near death by drowning a few
years later; still another envisions the cycle of drought and
torrential rains on his grandparents' Kansas farm. There are
fanciful memories of the Loup and other Nebraska rivers, interlaced
with Mark Twain's renderings of the Mississippi and John Neihardt's
poetic descriptions of the Missouri. And there are stories of more
recent times—a winter spent in a cabin on the Platte River, and
an often amusing Caribbean cruise that Kloefkorn took with his
wife. Throughout, Kloefkorn takes his memories for a walk,
following each recollection into unexpected, fruitful byways. Along
the way he pauses at larger themes—of nature, death, family, and
renewal—that gradually gather irresistible force and authority.
General
Imprint: |
Bison Books
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
February 2001 |
First published: |
February 2001 |
Authors: |
William Kloefkorn
|
Dimensions: |
203 x 133 x 8mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback
|
Pages: |
155 |
Edition: |
New Ed |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-8032-7799-1 |
Categories: |
Books >
Fiction >
General
Promotions
|
LSN: |
0-8032-7799-7 |
Barcode: |
9780803277991 |
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