Description
The essential feature of the prairie is its horizon, which you can neither walk to nor touch. When there is no summit to reach nor farther shore to attainonly a constantly receding point between earth and sky to followa journey proceeds as much into ones own mind as it does into the natural world. Sauntering through the tall grasses of the prairie, Paul Gruchow engages in just such a boundless journey, exploring simultaneously the subtle beauty of the Great Plains and the minds astonishment as such grandeur. Charting one cycle of seasons, Journal of a Prairie Year reveals countless cycles of thought: the innumerable sounds of winter snow beg us to understand its song; the fecundity of spring questions the accuracy of naming its abundance; the tenacity of prairie roots in a summer drought contrast with the shallow roots of our culture; and the mortality of fall mirrors our steady destruction of a once seemingly infinite expanse. The result is equal parts phenology and philosophy, a blend of natural and human history from a writer who makes empty places full and a readers imagination soar (Washington Post): calling us to remember a threatened world, and urging us to reach for its unmarred horizon.




