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 Location:  Home » America Travel » Nature & Wildlife » The Spirit of the Place: Indiana Hill CountryNovember 21, 2008  


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The Spirit of the Place: Indiana Hill Country
The Spirit of the Place: Indiana Hill Country
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Author: James Alexander Thom
Creator: Darryl Jones
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Category: Book

List Price: $39.95
Buy New: $14.99
You Save: $24.96 (62%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $4.70

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars(1 reviews)
Sales Rank: 655197

Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 132
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.7
Dimensions (in): 11.2 x 11.2 x 0.7

ISBN: 0253329876
Dewey Decimal Number: 779.991772
EAN: 9780253329875
ASIN: 0253329876

Publication Date: November 1995
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
"You have roots in a place, or you don't; you can't force them. It helps to be born there, though that's not your choice to make. But there are things you do that feed and strengthen those roots. The four best root fertilizers you can give in your lifetime are sweat and blood and tears and ashes. You can give both the sweat and the blood by stringing barbed-wire fences, by clearing briars and thorny locusts out of the fencerows, by picking raspberries and blackberries, or by hurting yourself with the tools or implements you use on behalf of your place. Or by giving birth there. You can give sweat and tears and ashes by burying a beloved animal or spreading a parent's ashes over the ground. You can give all of them, sweat, blood, tears and ashes, by fighting in a war for your country. If you're lucky you won't have to do that right there on the place of your own roots, but even then they all go to fertilize it. And then you can die in that place, and if that is the place you want to die, then that's really where your roots are." - James Alexander Thom. At Walden Pond, Henry Thoreau found the setting which would inspire his famous musings on the nature of existence and the foibles of his society. Photographer Jones and writer Thom take similar inspiration from the Southern Indiana hill country where they live and work and in consort provide a beautiful and insightful meditation on the meaning of place and the values of rootedness and community, reflecting their different but similar paths toward personal harmony and spiritual understanding. Jones sees beyond the surface of nature to the basic elements - earth, air, water, and rock. His photographs are: contemplative studies on the metaphysics of nature, the invisible made visible, God's mind revealed, and the pre-existing harmony which exists in nature if only we can see it. Thom's text, taking its inspiration from Jones's images, traces the cycle of his life from birth in rural Gosport to a life of journalism in the big cities of the world, and then back home again, where he found both his voice as a writer and his spiritual rootedness.

Amazon.com Review
A delightful book of photographs ably supported by text, The Spirit of the Place is a celebration of the subtle rather than the spectacular. Although Indiana cannot lay claim to sensational snowcapped mountains such as the Rockies or vast geological formations such as the Grand Canyon, her gently rolling hills stained with autumn colors and her creekbeds sculpted by winter ice possess a quieter, no less profound beauty.

Photographer Darryl Jones not only finds this beauty, but he translates it with breathtaking immediacy: a field of black-eyed Susans against a cloudless blue sky; morning light playing against a complicated pattern of rows of cut hay; sunset reflected in the ripples of a pond--this is the understated beauty of southern Indiana's hill country. Accompanying these sublime images is James Alexander Thom's lyrical prose, which tells the story of the places and the people who settled them. The Spirit of the Place is contemplative, harmonious, and profound.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A wonderful coffee table book that espouses the beauty of much-maligned Indiana   April 12, 2006
Photographer Darryl Jones and author James Alexander Thom teamed together to make a wonderful little book about the natural beauty of the southern Indiana hill country. Thom's text complements Jones' photographs wonderfully.

Being a native Hoosier, I have an appreciation for the subtle beauties of the state. Jones does as well. Most of his pictures are taken in hilly Owen county. He captures every season, as well as forest, field, stream, farm, and town scenes.

Thom's text is part biography and part stories he heard growing up in Owen County. If you are a fan on Thom's other works, this one will be a nice addition. If you've never heard of Thom, this is a great place to get to know him and his motivations as an author.

I give this one an 'A'.



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