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Pinhook

Finding Wholeness in a Fragmented Land

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Janisse Ray, award-winning author of Ecology of a Cracker Childhood and Wild Card Quilt, writes an evocative paean to wildness and wilderness restoration with an extraordinary journey into southern Georgia's Pinhook Swamp.

Pinhook Swamp acts as a vital watershed and wildlife corridor, a link between the great southern wildernesses of Okefenokee Swamp and Osceola National Forest. Together Okefenokee, Osceola, and Pinhook form one of the largest expanse of protected wild land east of the Mississippi River. This is one of America's last truly wild places, and Pinhook takes us into its heart.

Ray comes to know Pinhook intimately as she joins the fight to protect it, spending the night in the swamp, tasting honey made from its flowers, tracking wildlife, and talking to others about their relationship with the swamp. Ray sees Pinhook through the eyes of the people who live there—naturalists, beekeepers, homesteaders, hunters, and locals at the country store. In lyrical, down-home prose, she draws together the swamp's need for restoration and the human desire for wholeness and wildness in our own lives and landscapes.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 7, 2005
      The author of the American Book Award–winning Ecology of a Cracker Childhood
      celebrates South Georgia's humble Pinhook Swamp in an impassioned and poetic account of the area's environmental fragmentation and its subsequent restoration. The swamp, "170,000 acres of dreary dismal... too deep for a human to wade in, too shallow for a boat to draw," and populated by flies and mosquitoes, is the corridor connecting the Okefenokee Swamp with Osceola National Park. Most of its acres have now been purchased and protected, but environmentalists' work, Ray warns, is not finished yet. In impressionistic, lyrical chapters, Ray meditates on the meaning of silence ("Silence is the ghost of the panther" that used to populate Pinhook), the animals of the area (black bears, bees, frogs) and the people dedicated to saving it. She also includes poems, a Native American blessing and italicized reflections on the land's fragmentation ("the separation of habitat in a landscape... chopping a wild place into pieces") by roads, logging, mining and developments. Her moving book is a tribute to a small but crucial wild place and a call for readers to help preserve it and others like it.

    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2005
      This is the tale of south Georgia's Pinhook Swamp and how it was purchased to form one vast stretch of publicly owned wilderness in the southeastern United States by connecting the Okefenokee Swamp and Osceola National Forest. It is also the story of landscape fragmentation, with development having left only isolated pockets of land too small to support viable wildlife populations. Some believe that this fragmentation is now the most serious threat to biological diversity in the United States. Ray, an activist and naturalist, describes how a citizens' grassroots effort managed to save the Pinhook. Short, often disconnected chapters and fragments of narrative emphasize the theme of fragmentation. Readers should not expect a sequel to Ray's delightful "Ecology of a Cracker Childhood" and "Wildcard Quilt" -this is less personal. Still, many will enjoy her warm, engaging style. Although this work discusses some general ecological principles, the focus may be too narrow for all but regional collections. -Maureen J. Delaney-Lehman, Lake Superior State Univ. Lib., Sault Ste. Marie, MI

      Copyright 2005 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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