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Showing 1 - 5 of 5 matches in All Departments
When artist, illustrator, writer, and adventurer Rockwell Kent
first published N by E in a limited edition in 1930, his account of
a voyage on a 33-foot cutter from New York Harbor to the rugged
shores of Greenland quickly became a collectors' item. Little
wonder, for readers are immediately drawn to Kent's vivid
descriptions of the experience; we share "the feeling of wind and
wet and cold, of lifting seas and steep descents, of rolling over
as the wind gusts hit," and the sound "of wind in the shrouds, of
hard spray flung on a drum-tight canvas, of rushing water at the
scuppers, of the gale shearing a tormented sea."
In a luminous memoir of a life richly lived, one of America’s finest writers explores the themes that have shaped his life and work: the glories of the natural world, the lure of working for a circus and fighting forest fires, the afflictions of temporary blindness and blocked speech, and the enduring influence of literary friendships, including John Berryman’s, Edward Abbey’s, and his mentor, Archibald MacLeish.
In 1966, Edward Hoagland made a three-month excursion into the wild country of British Columbia and encountered a way of life that was disappearing even as he chronicled it. Showcasing Hoagland’s extraordinary gifts for portraiture—his cast runs from salty prospector to trader, explorer, missionary, and indigenous guide—Notes from the Century Before is a breathtaking mix of anecdote, derring-do, and unparalleled elegy from one of the finest writers of our time.
In 1964, at the age of three, Tim Bascom is thrust into a world of
eucalyptus trees and stampeding baboons when his family moves from
the Midwest to Ethiopia. The unflinchingly observant narrator of
this memoir reveals his missionary parents' struggles in a
sometimes hostile country. Sent reluctantly to boarding school in
the capital, young Tim finds that beyond the gates enclosing that
peculiar, isolated world, conflict roils Ethiopian society. When
secret riot drills at school are followed with an attack by
rampaging students near his parents' mission station, Tim witnesses
the disintegration of his family's African idyll as Haile
Selassie's empire begins to crumble.
A stirring tribute to one of America's most remote and beautiful
places by one of the first modern preservationists
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