
Falling into Place
An Intimate Geography of Home
Catherine Reid(Author)
Beacon Press
Published on 4. February 2014
Book
Hardback
184 pages
978-0-8070-0992-5 (ISBN)
Description
Quietly powerful essays, weaving keenly observed insights into the mysteries of nature with those of family and community
"It's not easy," Catherine Reid writes, "to love a person and a place in equal measure." Love she does, however, as described in these intimate, lyric essays about the land and people around her. With the inside perspective of a native New Englander combined with her outsider status as a lesbian, Reid explores such paradoxes as those that arise from harnessing wild rivers or legalizing same-sex marriage. Her fascination with natural phenomena-whether bird hibernation, the arrival of fishers in suburbia, or the explosion of amphibious life in the wet weeks of spring-is captured in writing that pays as much attention to the sounds of a sentence as to the rhythms of the landscapes she wanders.
Ultimately, Reid finds herself having to choose between her farmhouse near the Berkshires and a job in the South, between her known role in the land's stories and a new story yet to be written. Solace comes from companions as varied as a praying mantis, an otter, and her hundred-year-old grandmother, while resilience shows up in the stories of streams recovering from toxic spills and in communities weathering floods and town meetings. Reid celebrates the joyous engagement that comes with developing a deep connection with the places we call home and the life-human, animal, botanical-that surrounds us. At the same time, she offers keen insights into the way nature ultimately remains mysterious, beyond our knowing.
Sensuous and provocative, Falling into Place faces the beauty and challenges of our changing world head-on.
"It's not easy," Catherine Reid writes, "to love a person and a place in equal measure." Love she does, however, as described in these intimate, lyric essays about the land and people around her. With the inside perspective of a native New Englander combined with her outsider status as a lesbian, Reid explores such paradoxes as those that arise from harnessing wild rivers or legalizing same-sex marriage. Her fascination with natural phenomena-whether bird hibernation, the arrival of fishers in suburbia, or the explosion of amphibious life in the wet weeks of spring-is captured in writing that pays as much attention to the sounds of a sentence as to the rhythms of the landscapes she wanders.
Ultimately, Reid finds herself having to choose between her farmhouse near the Berkshires and a job in the South, between her known role in the land's stories and a new story yet to be written. Solace comes from companions as varied as a praying mantis, an otter, and her hundred-year-old grandmother, while resilience shows up in the stories of streams recovering from toxic spills and in communities weathering floods and town meetings. Reid celebrates the joyous engagement that comes with developing a deep connection with the places we call home and the life-human, animal, botanical-that surrounds us. At the same time, she offers keen insights into the way nature ultimately remains mysterious, beyond our knowing.
Sensuous and provocative, Falling into Place faces the beauty and challenges of our changing world head-on.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Boston, MA
United States
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
With dust jacket
Dimensions
Height: 225 mm
Width: 142 mm
Thickness: 20 mm
Weight
358 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-8070-0992-5 (9780807009925)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
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E-Book
02/2014
1st Edition
Beacon Press
€14.49
Available for download
Person
Catherine Reid directs the undergraduate creative writing program at Warren Wilson College, where she teaches courses in creative nonfiction and environmental writing. She is the author of Coyote: Seeking the Hunter in Our Midst and of essays that have appeared in such journals as the Georgia Review, Fourth Genre, Bellevue Literary Review, and Massachusetts Review. She lives in Asheville, North Carolina.
Content
Song Heart Rail
Water Rhythms
Tides
Ox Blink
Rescue
Salamander Crossing
Disquiet
Hitched, Massachusetts, 2004
Reliance
How to Become a Generalist
Companions
Deciphering Bird
Interventions
Catch and Release
Thoreau Alone Won’t Do
After a Sweet Singing Fall Down
Wild Geese and Other Nostalgias
When a Fox Skull No Longer Points Home
The Quiet House Is a Sudden Thing
Resilience
Acknowledgments
Notes
Water Rhythms
Tides
Ox Blink
Rescue
Salamander Crossing
Disquiet
Hitched, Massachusetts, 2004
Reliance
How to Become a Generalist
Companions
Deciphering Bird
Interventions
Catch and Release
Thoreau Alone Won’t Do
After a Sweet Singing Fall Down
Wild Geese and Other Nostalgias
When a Fox Skull No Longer Points Home
The Quiet House Is a Sudden Thing
Resilience
Acknowledgments
Notes