Shadows on the Klamath

Shadows on the Klamath
Author: Louise Wagenknecht
Publisher:
Total Pages: 248
Release: 2021-10-30
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780870711565

In the 1970s, Louise Wagenknecht returned to the Klamath River country of her childhood to take a job with the U.S. Forest Service, only to discover that navigating the shoals of professional and personal relationships as an adult was much more challenging than she ever dreamed. Over the next fifteen years, as she acquired knowledge and skills and successfully performed an outdoor job long thought to be a man's work, she found friends and allies, experienced a life-changing heartbreak, and over time came to realize that what the agency and its professional foresters thought they knew about the workings of the forest ecosystem was not only mistaken, but doomed to catastrophic failure in a new and warmer century.

Shadows in the Rain

Shadows in the Rain
Author: R. Joe King
Publisher:
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2007-01-01
Genre: Del Norte County (Calif.)
ISBN: 9780977453924

Shadows

Shadows
Author: George K. Camp
Publisher:
Total Pages: 200
Release: 1885
Genre: American poetry
ISBN:

Two Shadows

Two Shadows
Author: Kirstin And Dottie Jo Marsh
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2010-09
Genre:
ISBN: 9781450257121

On the verge of turning sixteen years old and getting her driver's license, Samantha Wright deals with life and school like most every other teenage girl in Klamath Falls, Oregon. Sure, she has some issues with her dad and her stepmom, and she misses her mother, who has died. But Sam is not prepared for the changes this school year brings. As the year gets underway, Sam and her best friend, Sarah, meet new students—like the hot guy with the purple hair—and they tackle their new classes. But soon Sam starts acting strangely, mumbling incoherent thoughts and losing moments of time. She hears strange noises and screaming from the nearby forest. Inadvertently, she discovers Two Moons, a strange new world with mystical creatures—some who want her and some who want her dead. She is shocked to find that she is the "chosen one"—the only one who can stop the clash between the Blood Vampires and the Free Vampires. With old friends and new, she is determined to see this conflict to the end and to get the answers about these two very different worlds.

Light on the Devils

Light on the Devils
Author: Louise Wagenknecht
Publisher:
Total Pages: 216
Release: 2011
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780870716119

When Louise Wagenknecht's family arrived in the remote logging town of Happy Camp in 1962, a boundless optimism reigned. Whites and Indians worked together in the woods and the lumber mills of northern California's Klamath country. Logging and lumber mills, it seemed, would hold communities together forever. But that booming prosperity would come to an end. Looking back on her teenage years spent along the Klamath River, Louise Wagenknecht recounts a vanishing way of life. She explores the dynamics of family relationships and the contradictions of being female in a western logging town in the 1960s. And she paints an evocative portrait of the landscape and her relationship with it. Light on the Devilsis a readable and elegant memoir of place. It will appeal to general readers interested in the Pacific Northwest, personal memoir, history, and natural history.

Unaccustomed Mercy

Unaccustomed Mercy
Author: William Daniel Ehrhart
Publisher: Texas Tech University Press
Total Pages: 180
Release: 1989
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780896721890

Every poet in this anthology represents the terrible beauty that Vietnam engendered in sensitive hearts, the curious grace with which the human spirit can endow even the ugliest realities."No one will get out of this volume without being hammered in the heart and singed in the soul. I could touch the tears on page after page."--Wallace Terry

White Poplar, Black Locust

White Poplar, Black Locust
Author: Louise Wagenknecht
Publisher: U of Nebraska Press
Total Pages: 282
Release: 2003-01-01
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 9780803248045

The author, a member of the U.S. Forest Service, recalls life in a Northern California town that is undergoing a transformation from lumber town to modern town and describes the dying years of a unique way of life. (Biography)

Re-writing America

Re-writing America
Author: Philip D. Beidler
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Total Pages: 366
Release: 1991
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780820312644

With his first book, American Literature and the Experience of Vietnam, Philip Beidler offered a pioneering study of the novels, plays, poetry, and "literature of witness" that sprang from the United States involvement in the Vietnam War. Reviewing the book, the journal American Literature declared, "[It is] more than just an introductory act. It also sets forth what are sure to be lasting types of American literary response to Vietnam, and of the scholarly response to the emerging literature of the war." In Re-Writing America, Beidler charts the ongoing achievements of the men and women who first gained public notice as Vietnam authors and who are now recognized as major literary interpreters of our national life and culture at large. These writers--among them Tim O'Brien, Philip Caputo, Winston Groom, David Rabe, John Balaban, Robert Stone, Michael Herr, Gloria Emerson, and Frances Fitzgerald--have applied in their later efforts, says Beidler, "many of the hard-won lessons of literary sense-making learned in initial works attempting to come explicitly to terms with Vietnam." Beidler argues that the Vietnam authors have done much to reenergize American creative writing and to lead it out of the poststructuralist impasse of texts as endless critiques of language, representation, and authority. With their direct experience of a divisive and frustrating war--"a war not of their own making but of the making of politicians and experts, a war of ancient animosities that cost nearly everything for those involved and settled virtually nothing"--these writers in many ways resemble the celebrated generation of poets and novelists who emerged from World War I. Like their forebears of 1914-18, those of the Vietnam generation have undertaken a common project of cultural revision: to "re-write America," to create an art that, even as it continues to acknowledge the war's painful memory, projects that memory into new dimensions of mythic consciousness for other--and better--times. Beidler fills his book with detailed, illuminating analyses of the writers' works, which, as he notes, have moved across an almost infinite range of subject, genre, and mode. From David Rabe, for example, have come innovative plays in which overt statements on the traumas of Vietnam (The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel, Streamers) have made way for broader commentaries on sex, power, and violence in American life (In the Boom Boom Room, HurlyBurly). Winstom Groom has moved from Better Times Than These, a rather traditional (even anachronistic) war novel, to further reaches of rambunctious humor in Forrest Gump. And journalist Michael Herr, whose Dispatches memorably defined a Vietnam landscape at once real and hallucinatory, carried his vision into collaborations on the films Apocalypse Now and Full Metal Jacket. As Beidler notes, the immense price that Vietnam exacted from the American soul continues to draw a plethora of interpretations and depictions. Vietnam authors remind us, in Tim O'Brien's words, of "the things they carried." But as Beidler makes clear, they now command us not only to remember but to imagine new possibilities as well.

Thank You for Your Service

Thank You for Your Service
Author: W.D. Ehrhart
Publisher: McFarland
Total Pages: 311
Release: 2019-02-15
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 1476678537

Fifty-five years in the writing, these are the collected poems of W.D. Ehrhart, one of the major figures in Vietnam War literature. Arranged chronologically, it allows readers to trace the development of a writer whose talents are bound together by the lingering physical, psychological, political and intellectual sensibilities the author first developed as a young enlisted Marine during the Vietnam War. And while many of the poems deal with the author's encounter with the Vietnam War and its endless consequences, the poems range widely in content from family and friends to nature and the environment to the blessings and absurdities of the human condition.

CMJ New Music Report

CMJ New Music Report
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 56
Release: 1998-12-28
Genre:
ISBN:

CMJ New Music Report is the primary source for exclusive charts of non-commercial and college radio airplay and independent and trend-forward retail sales. CMJ's trade publication, compiles playlists for college and non-commercial stations; often a prelude to larger success.