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A River Without Banks: Place and Belonging in the Inland Northwest
William Johnson
€ 18.99
€ 17.50
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Description for A River Without Banks: Place and Belonging in the Inland Northwest
Paperback. Num Pages: 160 pages. BIC Classification: WN. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 219 x 140 x 12. Weight in Grams: 200.
A River Without Banks chronicles one family’s journey to Idaho, with all of its uncertainties, promises, and hopes. The book explores their encounters with a place still partly wild, whose communities and landscapes teach them how to respect the earth and each other.
William Johnson’s essays move from a family vacation spent observing moose, to a comparison of the creation myths from Genesis and the Nez Perce, to watching a raptor seeking prey. Johnson meditates on how places, animals, and people teach us “how to see, and how we do, and don’t, belong.”
In prose that reveals a poet’s eye, Johnson examines how family relationships affect how we see the natural world. He explores the power of words to divide and to heal. He illuminates the challenges of sustaining a vital relationship with a home place.
A River Without Banks will appeal to readers interested in the literature of place, ecology, natural history, indigenous culture, and conservation.
William Johnson’s essays move from a family vacation spent observing moose, to a comparison of the creation myths from Genesis and the Nez Perce, to watching a raptor seeking prey. Johnson meditates on how places, animals, and people teach us “how to see, and how we do, and don’t, belong.”
In prose that reveals a poet’s eye, Johnson examines how family relationships affect how we see the natural world. He explores the power of words to divide and to heal. He illuminates the challenges of sustaining a vital relationship with a home place.
A River Without Banks will appeal to readers interested in the literature of place, ecology, natural history, indigenous culture, and conservation.
Product Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2010
Publisher
Oregon State University Press
Condition
New
Number of Pages
160
Place of Publication
Corvallis, OR, United States
ISBN
9780870715822
SKU
V9780870715822
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15
About William Johnson
William Johnson is the author of three volumes of poetry—Dogwood, Out of the Ruins, which received the Idaho Book of the Year Award, and At the Wilderness Boundary. His poems are widely published in journals, among them Poetry, Mother Earth News, Poetry Northwest, and Texas Review. His long interest in Thoreau resulted in a critical study, "What Thoreau Said: ‘Walden’ and the Unsavable.” He is Professor Emeritus at Lewis-Clark State College and lives in Lewiston, Idaho.
Reviews for A River Without Banks: Place and Belonging in the Inland Northwest
“Beautifully written… no ends-of-the-earth, cliff-top drama here, but the quiet pleasure of watching the flight of hawks through a kitchen window, taking a night walk along an Idaho river, getting rid of a no-longer useful wood stove, or observing moose while in the company of children on a family vacation… unique in its quiet emphasis on the day-to-day rewards of observing the natural life at hand, almost always within the context of a human family…” — Mary Clearman Blew, author of Jackalope Dreams