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    Deep Enough for Ivorybills

    Deep Enough for Ivorybills

    5.0 2

    by James Kilgo


    eBook

    $10.49
    $10.49
     $14.95 | Save 30%

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      ISBN-13: 9781616202965
    • Publisher: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
    • Publication date: 06/21/2013
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 206
    • File size: 4 MB

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    Table of Contents

    Author's NoteIX
    1.Deep Enough for Ivorybills1
    2.Actual Field Conditions11
    3.A Taste for Game25
    4.Red Gods38
    5.Worthy Blood52
    6.Bewildered67
    7.Songfeast81
    8.Grandfather103
    9.Isaac's Blessing133
    10.Fishing Upstream149
    11.Bass Water155
    12.Amazing Grace168
    13.Peace in the Valley179

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    This is the account of a man's initiation into the outdoors heritage of his home territory. Jim Kilgo was born and raised not to far from the bottomlands of the Great Pee Dee River in South Carolina, but it was not until he was grown that he began to respond to the powerful lure of the forests, fields, and swamplands of the South and the wildlife that inhabit them. For Kilgo, reentry into the wilderness becomes a window on the life that men can lead, within nature and out of it. His tales of hunting and fishing will delight anyone who has ever used rod or gun, yet by no means is this a book for devotees of hunting alone. What is rediscovered here illuminates the lives of human beings who, all to often unknowingly, are integrally part of the larger rhythms of nature and the seasons.

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    Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly
    In certain circles, hunting is despicable; in others, it is a cherished tradition, a way of life. Kilgo, who teaches at the University of Georgia, belongs to the huntin' and fishin' fraternity. The river swamps and forests of the South hold a special place in his life. ``Hunting,'' he writes, ``brought me a deeply satisfying relationship with other men and with the woods.'' He conveys the mystery and splendor of the forest swamp at dawn; he tells us of the feeling of claustrophobia at being lost in the swamp. He combines superb nature writing with hunting and fishing adventures, and with portraits of his companions. His book is not an apologia for hunting; rather, it is an insight into the mystique and camaraderie of the sport. Of primarily regional interest, these essays will appeal to birders, hunters and those who fish. (April)
    Library Journal
    English professor, Sunday School teacher, Little League coach, Kilgo feels a strong need to go into the woods and swamps in search of himself. For him deer hunting requires that he tell others of the experience in order to come to terms with it. Hunting also provides a connection to his ancestors, who owned and hunted on these same Georgia plantations. In accounts of hunting and fishing, alone and with comrades, Kilgo describes a coming of age, but told by an adult mostly of his adult life with nature being both stimulus and medium. Of interest to outdoor collections for its literary and philosophical perceptions. Roland Person, Southern Illinois Univ. Lib., Carbondale
    New York Times Book Review

    Kilgo's powerful memoir does justice to the finest literature in the southern tradition. . . . The book is the late-coming-of-age journal of a mature man who, reviving his childhood fascination with the woods, projects himself back into the wild country as he reaches into his family's past to understand its relationship to the land he hunts. . . . It should be consumed in small portions, a chapter or less at a time, and savored by the moment.

    Atlanta Journal-Constitution

    This is a book not just for hunters, birdwatchers, or naturalists. It's for everybody who senses, or perhaps remembers, that the woods have more to offer than a splotch of shade on a deck in the suburbs.

    Outside Magazine

    Throughout this small, taut book, Kilgo's feeling for the bottomland comes through in quiet, honest, and convincing language.

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