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288 pages, Paperback
First published May 19, 1998
"I could not have understood at this age, only eight or nine, what it might mean to have a voice one day, to speak as a writer speaks. I would have been baffled by the thought. The world I inhabited—the emotions I imaged horses to have, the sound of a night wind clattering ominously in the dry leaves of a eucalyptus tree—I imagined as a refuge, one that would be lost to me if I tried to explain it."This opening essay stands out, and is also unlike anything in the next maybe 150 pages of text before another essay revisits his youth. And none of his other essays really captured me like this opening.
Stories do not give instruction, they do not explain how to love a companion or how to find God. They offer, instead, patterns of sound and association, of event and image. Suspended as listeners and readers in these patterns, we might reimagine our lives. It is through story that we embrace the great breadth of memory, that we can distinguish what is true, that we may glimpse, at least occasionally, how to live without despair in the midst of the horror that dogs and unhinges us.
Stories do not give instruction & do not explain how to find God. They offer, instead, patterns of sound & association, of event & image. Suspended as listeners & readers in these patterns, we might reimagine our lives.I think the essence of Barry Lopez is to be found in his explanation for a change of college majors, from aeronautical engineering to the humanities. Having long been enamored of the concept of flight, Lopez discovered that it was "the metaphor of flight & not the mechanics of flight that had mesmerized me".
It is through story that we embrace the great breadth of memory, that we can distinguish what is true, and that we may glimpse, at least occasionally, how to live without despair in the midst of the horror that dogs & unhinges us.
No one of these places can be entirely fathomed, biologically or aesthetically. They are mysteries upon which we impose names. Enchantments. We tick off the names glibly but lovingly. We mean no disrespect. Our genuine desire, though we may be skeptical about the time it would take & uncertain of its practical value to us, is to actually know these places.At the same time, those who live in these areas may take them for granted. Lopez suggests that they "have fallen prey to the fallacies of memory" but have a knowledge that is "intimate rather than encyclopedic, human but not necessarily scholarly, ringing with the concrete details of experience."
As deeply ingrained in the American psyche as the desire to conquer & control the land is to sojourn in it, to sail up & down Pamlico Sound in North Carolina, to paddle a canoe through Minnesota's Boundary Waters, to walk on the desert of the Great Salt Lake, to camp in the stony hardwood valleys of Vermont.