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Weaving a Way Home: A Personal Journey Exploring Place and Story

di Leslie Van Gelder

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
7643354,997 (3.16)30
"In the tradition of writers Lewis Hyde, Barry Lopez, Peter Matthiessen, Joseph Meeker, Steven Mithen, Paul Shepard, Gary Snyder, and Terry Tempest Williams, Van Gelder uses both creative nonfiction narrative and evolutionary biological theory to explore complex terrain. Following Van Gelder's own travels, the book moves from the caves of the Dordogne lit only by the small beam of a flashlight, to an acacia thicket in Mozambique, to a black fly-infested bay inappropriately named Baie de Ha Ha in the inlands of Quebec, to the green line wrapped in barbed wire separating northern and southern Cyprus, to Abu Simbel's empty stone eyes in the Egyptian desert, and finally to the high road above Pelorus Sound on the rocky coasts of New Zealand. The author takes the reader to each place to create a storied landscape and explore new intellectual terrain. Van Gelder shows us that our collections of experiences, unique to us, can only be shared through the articulation of narrative. Weaving a Way Home will appeal to those deeply interested in knowing how we forge relationships with places and how that shapes who we are."--BOOK JACKET.… (altro)
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» Vedi le 30 citazioni

Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
This book deosn't really have a plot or a focus, and ultimately it didn't work for me as a reader, although I respect what Van Gelder seems to have been trying to do. I'd be curious to check out other books by her, because she's quite a good writer, but I couldn't manage to finish this one and I don't think I'll be returning to it anytime soon. ( )
  heavyleg | Oct 4, 2017 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
All righty. I received this book in 2008 and am relieved to learn that I am not the only person who was unable to get through it. Explorations of themes of home and attachment to landscapes hit me in the heart, and I hoped that this book would find a place there next to Scott R. Sanders' lovely Stone Country. Nope. So after five years of foregoing early reviewer books due to the shame of having failed to review Weaving a Way Home, here is my review: it is unreadable. I'm still embarrassed, but at least now I'm not quite so alone. ( )
1 vota boltgirl | Apr 7, 2013 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
This book represents the marriage of travel narrative, memoir, literary criticism, and anthropological disquisition; and is therefore guilty of bibliological polygamy. Where is DOMA when you need it? ( )
  jburlinson | Sep 6, 2011 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Like many of the reviewers below, I received a copy of this through Early Reviewers. And, like many of them, I simply could not make it through the text. It's been sitting on my bedside table all this time -- and I periodically pick it up for another go, but I have not been able to make it happen. I enjoy reading scholarship and memoir both, but I found this nigh unto impenetrable. My impression of this is that Van Gelder might have made a very compelling work of scholarship with a broader research question, or she might have written a very interesting memoir. But to combine the two was to diminish both aspects. I feel sorry that I couldn't finish the book, but sometimes there's no help for it.
  marisol | Feb 7, 2011 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
I cannot rate this book as I have not completed reading it. I truly have tried. I was fascinated by the subject matter when I requested it from Early Reviewers. I couldn't wait to get it.

The book has been beside my bed for over a year. I own a lot of books. A lot of them as still are my "to read" list. There is nothing about this book that makes me want to put down any of my other books and finish reading it. I have skimmed it and read a few chapters. The writing in dense and thick. I am usually not bothered by too much description and too many adjectives - but this author's style did not suit me. I am not sure I will ever pick it back up.
  AzureMountain | Apr 27, 2010 |
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"In the tradition of writers Lewis Hyde, Barry Lopez, Peter Matthiessen, Joseph Meeker, Steven Mithen, Paul Shepard, Gary Snyder, and Terry Tempest Williams, Van Gelder uses both creative nonfiction narrative and evolutionary biological theory to explore complex terrain. Following Van Gelder's own travels, the book moves from the caves of the Dordogne lit only by the small beam of a flashlight, to an acacia thicket in Mozambique, to a black fly-infested bay inappropriately named Baie de Ha Ha in the inlands of Quebec, to the green line wrapped in barbed wire separating northern and southern Cyprus, to Abu Simbel's empty stone eyes in the Egyptian desert, and finally to the high road above Pelorus Sound on the rocky coasts of New Zealand. The author takes the reader to each place to create a storied landscape and explore new intellectual terrain. Van Gelder shows us that our collections of experiences, unique to us, can only be shared through the articulation of narrative. Weaving a Way Home will appeal to those deeply interested in knowing how we forge relationships with places and how that shapes who we are."--BOOK JACKET.

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Il libro di Leslie Van Gelder Weaving a Way Home: A Personal Journey Exploring Place and Story è stato disponibile in LibraryThing Early Reviewers.

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