Round of a Country Year
By David Kline
Introduction by Wendell Berry
By David Kline
Introduction by Wendell Berry
By David Kline
Introduction by Wendell Berry
By David Kline
Introduction by Wendell Berry
Category: Science & Technology
Category: Science & Technology
-
$16.95
Aug 22, 2017 | ISBN 9781619029248
-
Aug 15, 2017 | ISBN 9781619029835
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
Too Much Fun
Log-Linear Models, Extensions, and Applications
Quotes for All Seasons
National Parks Stickerology
Computing Legacies
Darwinizing Gaia
A Just Transition for All
Starlore of the Constellations
Houseplant
Praise
Praise for Great Possessions: An Amish Farmer’s Journal
“This book is a quiet paean to things lost, a set of values we’ve put in the attic.”
—New York Times Book Review
“This journal of an Amish farmer – an observant, well–read naturalist – disarms before it begins. The acknowledgements start off, I am deeply grateful to my entire family for their . . . generous offers to do the evening milking without my help so that I would have an hour of uninterrupted time to meet an editor’s deadline. David Kline and his family work their 70 tillable acres (of a 120–acre farm) with horses and without electricity or chemicals; but they can almost always take the time to listen to the season’s bird songs . . . or list a new bird species spotted on the farm . . . or stop the team while mowing to rescue a nest of bobolinks. In these short essays, first published in the Amish magazine Farm Life and here introduced by Wendell Berry, Kline expresses his delight in nature (including probably the most beautiful of all batrachian sounds, the pure sustained trill of the American toad); speculates on connections between modern agricultural practices and the decline of wildlife populations; quotes other naturalists and scholars from Aristotle to Jean Henri Fabre to the latest academic researchers; instructs on the proper preparation of sassafras tea; and lets us in on countless small discoveries and observations. In thus sharing his Great Possessions, he comes across as a model of sanity, contentment, and generosity. And his inherited tradition of simple living, as supported here by wide ecological learning, is strikingly persuasive.” —Kirkus Reviews
“He is an Amish Thoreau.”—Wes Jackson, author of Consulting the Genius of the Place: An Ecological Approach to a New Agriculture
Praise for Scratching the Woodchuck
“Unlike the plethora of books intended to help renew and reassemble our disjointed, modern lives, Scratching the Woodchuck provides no instructions for being mindful, strengthening community, cherishing the natural world, deepening spirituality, or doing meaningful work. Instead, Amish farmer David Kline shares with readers a life wholly made of these fundamental things.” —San Francisco Chronicle
“Kline’s thoroughly charming survey of the natural world . . . has much to teach us about appreciating wild things wherever we happen to be.” —Kirkus Reviews
“A calm and peaceful book . . . David Kline is a wonderful voice for all of these observations.”—Booklist
“In this delightful book Kline instructs the reader about the nature and wildlife that he observes on his Ohio farm. But his underlying message is, not surprisingly, to take the time to appreciate the joys of life: the birds, trees, hayfields, streams, clouds, spring peepers?all of nature, including our fellow human beings . . . As a pleasant, instructive visit with an appreciative witness to nature, this book is recommended for all libraries.” —Library Journal
“If you want to know what the real world looks like, you had best read Scratching the Woodchuck. David Kline writes with joy, good humor, and style. I can’t think of a book that’s given me more pleasure in years.” —Bill McKibben
“Scratching the Woodchuck is a wonderful book about the pleasures derived from a well loved and competently used place. David Kline and the Amish are national treasures.” —David Orr
“David Kline is an alert observer of the natural world and its creatures, and an utterly pleasant and interesting companion.” — Wendell Berry
“David Kline’s vision goes beyond 20/20 into the realm of A/Z, where he eloquently uses all of the letters in between to delight us with his insights from his wide travels at home. He’s an Amish Thoreau, except he scratches the woodchuck that Thoreau ate.” —Wes Jackson
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
Just for joining you’ll get personalized recommendations on your dashboard daily and features only for members.
Find Out More Join Now Sign In