The New Georgia Guide

الغلاف الأمامي
University of Georgia Press, 1996 - 780 من الصفحات
Reconciliation and remembering are the forces at work in Inheritance of Horses. In these essays, James Kilgo seeks the common ground between his roles as a man, as husband and father, and as heir to his family legacy. Pausing at mid-life to make an eloquent, understated stand against our era's rootlessness, he honors friendship, kinship, nature, and tradition.

In the opening section, Kilgo focuses on the tension between his need for ritualistic male camaraderie and his familial obligations. Searching the woods for arrowheads, sitting around the dinner table at a hunting lodge, or careening down an abandoned logging road in a pickup, he seems ever-prone to the intrusions of domesticity and civilization: a sudden memory of miring the family station wagon in the sand on a beach trip, an encounter with a couple on their sixtieth wedding anniversary, a stream littered with trash and stocked with overbred hatchery trout.

Restlessness and responsibility converge and again clash in the second series of essays, in which domestic themes are explored in settings that range from Kilgo's own living room to Yellowstone Park and the deep waters off the Virgin Islands. Through such images as a hornet's nest, a gale-force storm, a grizzly bear, and a marlin, Kilgo gauges the strengths and vulnerabilities of his family and moves toward an existence that is part of, not apart from, the women in his life.

The long title essay composes the book's final section. Reading through a cache of letters exchanged between his two grandfathers, Kilgo recovers and revises his memories of them. What he learns of their open, passionate friendship reveals an essentially feminine aspect of their patriarchal natures, enriching, but also confusing, Kilgo's earlier understanding of who they were. As some of the more unhappy or unpleasant details of his grandfathers' lives come to light, they first heighten, then assuage, Kilgo's ambivalence about a family heritage built as much on myth as on truth.

The manner in which Kilgo makes such intensely personal concerns so broadly relevant accentuates what might be called the "told," rather than the "written," quality of Inheritance of Horses. He is foremost a storyteller, working in a style that is classically southern in its pacing and its feel for the land, but all his own in its restrained humor and lack of self-absorption. Guided by a storyteller's respect for common people and common feelings, Kilgo never prescribes or moralizes but rather brings us to places where principled choices can be made about what we need and value most in our lives.

 

المحتوى

The New Georgia Guide Georgia Odyssey
3
Northwest Georgia Tropic of Conscience
105
Northeast Georgia Appalachian Otherness
165
Metropolitan Atlanta Looking for Atlanta
233
East Central Georgia East Georgia Janus
295
West Central Georgia The View from Dowdells Knob
359
Central Georgia The Heart of Georgia
423
Southwest Georgia A Garden of Irony and Diversity
497
Southeast Georgia The Spirit of Southeast Georgia
565
The Coast Tidewater Heritage
623
Sources of Information
695
Bibliography
703
Contributors
715
Index
727
حقوق النشر

طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات

عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة

نبذة عن المؤلف (1996)

Contributors include Betsy Braden, John Braden, Jane Cassady, James C. Cobb, Timothy J. Crimmins, Thomas G. Dyer, Lee W. Formwalt, Fred C. Fussell, Whit Gibbons, Steve Gurr, William Hedgepeth, Mary Hood, John Inscoe, James Kilgo, Delma E. Presley, Buddy Sullivan, Jane Powers Weldon, Dana F. White, Philip Lee Williams, William W. Winn

معلومات المراجع