The Hour of Land: A Personal Topography of America's National Parks

The Hour of Land: A Personal Topography of America's National Parks

by Terry Tempest Williams

Narrated by Terry Williams

Unabridged — 11 hours, 2 minutes

The Hour of Land: A Personal Topography of America's National Parks

The Hour of Land: A Personal Topography of America's National Parks

by Terry Tempest Williams

Narrated by Terry Williams

Unabridged — 11 hours, 2 minutes

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Overview

For years, America's national parks have provided public breathing spaces in a world in which such spaces are steadily disappearing, which is why close to 300 million people visit the parks each year. Now, to honor the centennial of the National Park Service, Terry Tempest Williams, the author of the beloved memoir When Women Were Birds, returns with The Hour of Land, a literary celebration of our national parks, what they mean to us, and what we mean to them.



Through twelve carefully chosen parks, from Yellowstone in Wyoming to Acadia in Maine to Big Bend in Texas, Tempest Williams creates a series of lyrical portraits that illuminate the unique grandeur of each place while delving into what it means to shape a landscape with its own evolutionary history into something of our own making. Part memoir, part natural history, and part social critique, The Hour of Land is a meditation and manifesto on why wild lands matter to the soul of America. Our national parks stand at the intersection of humanity and wildness, and there's no one better than Tempest Williams to guide us there.

Editorial Reviews

The New York Times Book Review - Andrea Wulf

…a collection of essays that's a personal journey as much as a meditation on the purpose and relevance of national parks in the 21st century. The Hour of Land isn't a guidebook, taking readers through the nation's most popular or most frequently visited parks—quite the opposite. Instead Williams embarks on an idiosyncratic journey through various landscapes (some empty, some crowded), delving, along the way, into the politics, activism, history and people that are also a crucial part of them…Williams's language has its own visceral beauty…The Hour of Land is one of the best nature books I've read in years, filled with seductive prose…My only advice is to read the book. And then read it again, with pen in hand. And then visit a national park…

Publishers Weekly

04/25/2016
Williams (When Women Were Birds), a longtime environmental activist, adds a meditative element to memoir as she shares her abiding love for America’s open spaces. She grew up in Utah, home to five national parks and seven national monuments, and writes of places such as the Grand Tetons in Wyoming, Big Bend National Park in Texas, and Glacier National Park in Montana. Some parks are new to Williams, and others are deeply familiar: Williams’s great-grandfather introduced Grand Teton National Park to his son, who introduced it to his sons, who in turn introduced it to her. Chapters on Big Bend and the Gulf Coast give Williams opportunities to address political and environmental issues, particularly calls for a wall to separate the U.S. from Mexico. “The 118-mile border that Big Bend National Park shares with Mexico would be closed not only to humans,” but to the “movement and migration” of an array of species that “have no understanding of man-made borders,” she writes. Similarly, her discussion of the Gulf Islands National Seashore centers on BP and the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill. In passionate and insightful prose, Williams celebrates the beauty of the American landscape while reinforcing the necessity of responsible stewardship. Illus. Agency: Brandt & Hochman Literary. (June)

From the Publisher

"Williams's language has its own visceral beauty. . . . The Hour of Land is one of the best nature books I've read in years."—Andrea Wulf, The New York Times Book Review

"If you have never set foot in a national park, love the wilderness, like history, or enjoy great storytelling, The Hour of Land is calling you."—The Philadelphia Inquirer

"Terry Tempest Williams is a force of nature in at least two ways. First, she pleads forcefully on behalf of the natural world, especially national parks, wilderness areas, and endangered species. And, second, she writes as she damn well pleases. . . . The author's trademark poetic prose dominates every page."—Dennis Drabelle, The Washington Post

"[A] necessary new book . . . Williams shows how national parks can be both symbols of and actual catalysts for the things that are best about America, offering a montage of grandeur that can not only make one tear up in gratitude and an embarrassing sort of patriotic pride but also demonstrate the real value of these 'wholesome' feelings to human emotional life, spurring one to engage differently with the world. . . . Williams' is only one voice in the polyphonic story of the American landscape. But it is an especially valuable one in addressing how land, even that which is nominally preserved in a state of Edenic purity, shifts with this country’s social history as much as it does through geology and time."— Jenny Hendrix, Slate

"Whether contemplating the spiritual life she finds 'inside the heart of the wild' or marveling at the peaks and monuments that comprise 'our best idea' – the National Parks system – Williams movingly urges us to remember that 'heaven is here.'"—O Magazine

"Williams (When Women Were Birds), a longtime environmental activist, adds a meditative element to memoir as she shares her abiding love for America’s open spaces. . . . In passionate and insightful prose, Williams celebrates the beauty of the American landscape while reinforcing the necessity of responsible stewardship."—Publishers Weekly

"A broadly ambitious and deeply impassioned collection of essays . . . There are few nonfiction writers who can capture the essence of the American wilderness landscape as eloquently as Williams. . . . Her distinctive prose style is capable of conveying a deep spiritual dimension within the physical setting. . . . An important, well-informed, and moving read for anyone interested in learning more about America’s national parks."—Kirkus Reviews

"Readers who like their prose ardent and their politics leaning left will take particular pleasure in The Hour of Land. . . . Williams is frequently a lyrical writer and an intrepid thinker. . . . Reading her is better than buying a commemorative postage stamp — she delivers us into a more thoughtful grove."—Karen R. Long, Newsday

"An impassioned call to preserve and protect our national park system, America’s network of natural splendor, which celebrates its 100th anniversary this year. . . . Repeatedly, [Williams] calls for us to listen to the land, to respect it, to behave more responsibly. . . . [She] raises issues about movements to sell public lands, off-road vehicle damage and other 'acts of greed,' water use, toxic emissions from oil and gas development apparently causing increased infant mortality, and other problems. Williams awakens readers to present issues easily obscured by the National Park Service’s carefully cultivated, idyllic image. . . . She hopes to shake us from our fondness for souvenir T-shirts."—Irene Wanner, The Seattle Times

"The Hour of Land is about National Parks as battlegrounds. What it means to hold land in trust, who defines its best uses, the tangibility of park boundaries, and whether and how we will reconcile our history with our present and future, are all tested on these lands. . . . It's a heady book. But it is an important one, too, because the chronically underfunded National Park Service—and more broadly, all our public lands—are confronting a staggering list of stressors right now. . . . The Hour of Land is part of a conversation to kick off the next 100 years."—Outside Magazine

"A provocative, heartfelt collection of essays . . . As Tempest Williams turns her attention to 12 different parks, from Gates of the Arctic National Park in Alaska to Acadia National Park in Maine, she considers both the large-scale forces—economical, ecological, political—bearing upon these landscapes, and the smaller scope of her personal relationships with these individual parks. . . . We are reminded that the parks are preserved only by the grace of people, and Tempest Williams insists, in the end, that 'the history of our national parks and monuments is a history of subversion, shaped by individuals.'"—Jeffrey Zuckerman, Pacific Standard Magazine

"In this gorgeous collection of 12 essays, published to mark the centennial of the National Park Service, Terry Tempest Williams provides a poetic and searing portrait of the land and, by extension, of America itself."—Kelly Blewett, BookPage

"Enrapturing and encompassing chronicle of her deeply inquisitive, meditative, and dramatic sojourns in a dozen national parks . . . illustrated with exquisite photographs by such masters as Lois Conner, Lee Friedlander, Sally Mann, and Sebastião Salgado, this is a uniquely evocative, illuminating, profound, poignant, beautiful, courageous, and clarion book about the true significance of our national parks. These sanctuaries, Williams muses, are not only about preservation and recreation, but also about education and remembrance."—Donna Seaman, Booklist (starred review)

"It would have been easy for Terry Tempest Williams to fall back on 'the best idea we ever had'—an interpretation articulated by Wallace Stegner in 1983 and popularized by Ken Burns in 2009. Instead, Williams asks hard questions about the current relevance and original goodness of America's parks. She offers a poetic revision to the Organic Act of 1916, which mandated the conservation of scenery and wildlife for the enjoyment of the public in such a manner as to leave them unimpaired. In her 400-page mission statement, Williams updates 'enjoyment' to spiritual renewal, specifies that 'the public' means more than white people, and insists that 'unimpaired' means what it says. . . . A sincerely disobedient book."—Jared Farmer, Science

"Our public lands are ours, she argues, and it's up to us to keep them safe. It is because of this sentiment, the well-researched history, and the unforgettable prose, The Hour of Land will join my bookshelf's ranks of nature writers. But before that, it will travel in my daypack on train rides or a hike, its weight beside my water bottle, my smart phone, a trail map, and a blue book for the next election."—Gretchen Lida, Brevity

"[Williams’s] writing is poetic, passionate and unexpected. . . . By turns sad, despairing, and hopeful, even thrilled in the presence of natural beauty, The Hour of Land is emotive, intelligent and well-traveled. It is only right that Williams should celebrate the Park Service's centennial with such a remarkable collection of wisdom and scintillating lines."—Julia Jenkins, Shelf Awareness

From the Publisher - AUDIO COMMENTARY

"[T]his is a uniquely evocative, illuminating, profound, poignant, beautiful, courageous, and clarion book about the true significance of our national parks." —Booklist Starred Review

Library Journal - Audio

11/01/2016
Williams (Finding Beauty in a Broken World) honors the 2016 centennial of the National Parks system with a memoir about her personal experiences with a dozen parks and national monuments. She includes the history of each and a description of what each is like today. She talks with Park Service employees and park enthusiasts. She writes not only about the well-known Grand Teton, Glacier, and Canyonlands but also about Effigy Mounds in northeastern Iowa and the Gulf Island National Seashore in Mississippi. She crosses the country from Acadia in Maine to Alcatraz in California. "What are we searching for and what do we find?" she asks. "It is not so much what we learn that matters but what we feel in relationship to a world beyond ourselves." Williams narrates her book with dignity and clarity, giving a quiet urgency to heed "the clarion call for the preservation of wilderness for our future." VERDICT Highly recommended. ["Of interest to travelers, historians, environmentalists, and anyone concerned about the past, present, and future of this country's protected landscapes": LJ 4/15/16 review of the Sarah Crichton: Farrar hc.]—Nann Blaine Hilyard, Winthrop Harbor, IL

Library Journal

04/15/2016
Williams (When Women Were Birds) presents a "personal topography," a combination travel memoir and historical study of 12 U.S. national parks. Each location presents its own challenges and controversies. The author tells of John D. Rockefeller Jr. secretly buying up land in and around Jackson Hole, with the intent of donating it toward the establishment of Grand Teton National Park. She remarks on watching American and Mexican children skipping stones back and forth across the Rio Grande in Big Bend National Park and discusses the difficult, diplomatic job of the superintendent of Teddy Roosevelt National Park, in negotiating attempts by oil companies to drill on park land. She describes her discomfort at meeting a Gettysburg National Battlefield tour guide who presents the area's history with a decided Confederate bias, and a powerful visit to Alcatraz Island to see an art exhibit by imprisoned Chinese dissident Ai Weiwei. Throughout, the author emphasizes the importance of maintaining our national public green spaces and the struggle against political and environmental forces that are threatening their survival. VERDICT Of interest to travelers, historians, environmentalists, and anyone concerned about the past, present, and future of this country's protected landscapes.—Rachel Owens, Daytona State Coll. Lib., FL

JUNE 2016 - AudioFile

Terry Tempest Williams’s clear voice and straightforward delivery make her remarkable collection of 13 personal essays sound intimate. In this reflective journey, the renowned environmental writer reveals her family history as she explores our nation’s parks and monuments. Corresponding with the 100th anniversary of the founding of the National Park Service, this audiobook takes the listener on vivid adventures that include barely escaping a raging wildfire in Glacier National Park, hearing the Gettysburg story from the Confederate point of view, and appreciating the Rockefeller family’s massive land donations—from Maine’s Acadia National Park to the Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming. Williams’s persuasive narration celebrates the value of preserving both wild and historic places while honoring this most American idea. A.M. © AudioFile 2016, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2016-03-16
In commemoration of the centennial of the National Park Service, Williams (When Women Were Birds: Fifty-four Variations on Voice, 2012, etc.) explores 12 diverse parks. There are few contemporary nonfiction writers who can capture the essence of the American wilderness landscape as eloquently and intimately as Williams. Noted for writing about the American West, her distinctive prose style is capable of conveying a deep spiritual dimension within the physical setting. This is very much in evidence in her latest book, a broadly ambitious and deeply impassioned collection of essays on a select group of settings within the national park system. Her writing expands beyond recreational parks to include battlefields, monuments, and seashores. Williams reflects on personal ties to locations such as Grand Teton and stretches across the country to Arcadia National Park, where she discovers familial roots going back several generations. Other locations, such as Big Bend National Park and Alcatraz Island, offer first-time encounters. Williams provides well-documented histories of many of these parks, yet a more consistent thread running throughout the book touches on the rapid changes incurred in recent decades, primarily related to the destructive effects of climate change or by the interference and conflicting interests of the federal government and the oil industry. The author heartbreakingly examines the Gulf Islands National Seashore and the mass devastation caused by the 2010 BP oil spill. Williams' message for preserving and respecting these sights is heartfelt, but she has a tendency to occasionally overstate her message, and her calls to action sometimes veer toward rants. Her writing is most powerful and convincing when she allows her subtle and often sublime reflections to shine forth: "No matter how much we try to manage and manipulate, orchestrate, or regulate our national parks, they will remain as the edge-scapes they are existing on the boundaries between culture and wildness—improvisational spaces immune to the scripts of anyone." An important, well-informed, and moving read for anyone interested in learning more about America's national parks.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940170493432
Publisher: Tantor Audio
Publication date: 06/07/2016
Edition description: Unabridged
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