PrairyErth: (a Deep Map)Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1999 - 624 pages NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER. By the author of Blue Highways, PrairyErth is "a majestic survey of land and time and people in a single county of the Kansas plains" (Hungry Mind Review). William Least Heat-Moon travels by car and on foot into the core of our continent, focusing on the landscape and history of Chase County--a sparsely populated tallgrass prairie in the Flint Hills of central Kansas--exploring its land, plants, animals, and people until this small place feels as large as the universe. Called a "modern-day Walden" by the Chicago Sun-Times, PrairyErth is a journey through place, through time, and into the human mind from the acclaimed author of Here, There, Elsewhere: Stories from the Road. "A sense of the American grain that will give [PrairyErth] a permanent place in the literature of our country."--Paul Theroux, New York Times |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 61
Page 5
... traveler in search of pleasure , it certainly possesses few attrac- tions . But a [ correspondent ] , in pursuit of useful knowledge for the reading public , observes things differently . -Henry Stanley , My Early Travels and Adventures ...
... traveler in search of pleasure , it certainly possesses few attrac- tions . But a [ correspondent ] , in pursuit of useful knowledge for the reading public , observes things differently . -Henry Stanley , My Early Travels and Adventures ...
Page 11
... travelers of this transcontinental highway can be thankful Bobby Troup drove route 66 ) . Yet , for at least the last couple of generations , the westering center of American population has fol- lowed 50 , at times edging precisely ...
... travelers of this transcontinental highway can be thankful Bobby Troup drove route 66 ) . Yet , for at least the last couple of generations , the westering center of American population has fol- lowed 50 , at times edging precisely ...
Page 12
... travelers - and some- times natives more to discomfiture than rapture . Of the prairie , Willa Cather wrote in My Ántonia : Between that earth and that sky I felt erased , blotted out . The protection and sureties of the vertical ...
... travelers - and some- times natives more to discomfiture than rapture . Of the prairie , Willa Cather wrote in My Ántonia : Between that earth and that sky I felt erased , blotted out . The protection and sureties of the vertical ...
Page 13
... traveler would hardly know she was crossing them . Because they belong to the open world of grasses , they domi- nate if not the sky then surely the horizon with their symmetrical and flattened tops , their trapezoidal slopes , and ( at ...
... traveler would hardly know she was crossing them . Because they belong to the open world of grasses , they domi- nate if not the sky then surely the horizon with their symmetrical and flattened tops , their trapezoidal slopes , and ( at ...
Page 41
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Contents
IV | 19 |
V | 21 |
VI | 27 |
VII | 31 |
VIII | 40 |
IX | 46 |
X | 49 |
XI | 57 |
XLIX | 272 |
L | 279 |
LI | 288 |
LII | 295 |
LIII | 301 |
LIV | 303 |
LV | 309 |
LVI | 317 |
XII | 59 |
XIII | 66 |
XIV | 71 |
XV | 76 |
XVI | 81 |
XVII | 85 |
XVIII | 91 |
XIX | 93 |
XX | 100 |
XXI | 106 |
XXII | 113 |
XXIII | 118 |
XXIV | 123 |
XXV | 131 |
XXVI | 133 |
XXVII | 142 |
XXVIII | 147 |
XXIX | 156 |
XXX | 162 |
XXXI | 167 |
XXXII | 173 |
XXXIII | 175 |
XXXIV | 181 |
XXXV | 187 |
XXXVI | 194 |
XXXVII | 202 |
XXXVIII | 207 |
XXXIX | 213 |
XL | 215 |
XLI | 222 |
XLII | 230 |
XLIII | 237 |
XLIV | 244 |
XLV | 253 |
XLVI | 257 |
XLVII | 259 |
XLVIII | 265 |
LVII | 326 |
LVIII | 334 |
LIX | 346 |
LX | 351 |
LXI | 353 |
LXII | 363 |
LXIII | 371 |
LXIV | 381 |
LXV | 386 |
LXVI | 400 |
LXVII | 413 |
LXVIII | 415 |
LXIX | 421 |
LXX | 430 |
LXXI | 439 |
LXXII | 446 |
LXXIII | 465 |
LXXIV | 475 |
LXXV | 477 |
LXXVI | 484 |
LXXVII | 493 |
LXXVIII | 505 |
LXXIX | 513 |
LXXX | 531 |
LXXXI | 537 |
LXXXII | 539 |
LXXXIII | 547 |
LXXXIV | 561 |
LXXXV | 583 |
LXXXVI | 592 |
LXXXVII | 597 |
LXXXVIII | 601 |
LXXXIX | 603 |
XC | 608 |
XCI | 623 |
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Common terms and phrases
acres American asked Bazaar began bird bison Brandley building café called cattle Cedar Point Chase County Cottonwood Falls Cottonwood River Council Grove countians couple courthouse coyote Creek dark Diamond Spring dream Elmdale Emporia farm farmers feet fence fire Flint Hills gone grass highway horse hundred Indian John James Ingalls Kansas land later live look Matfield Matfield Green miles Missouri morning moved native nearly never night once Osage Hill Osage orange pasture plant prairie pulled quadrangle railroad ranch river road rock Saffordville Sam Wood Santa Fe Santa Fe Trail says seemed settlers soil stone story Strong City talk tallgrass things tion told took town Trail travelers tree tribe turn uplands village wagon walk watch wind woman Wood