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William Least Heat Moon, William Least Least Heat-Moon Heat-Moon, William Least Heat-Moon
River-Horse - Across America by Boat
English · Paperback / Softback
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Description
Zusatztext "Heat-Moon's exuberant erudition propels the reader with historical vignettes! ecological and geological detail! and often hilarious encounters with local eccentrics." -- Time "Heat-Moon's prose is clear! straight-forward and lively and his vision unclouded." -- Chicago Sun-Times Informationen zum Autor William Least Heat-Moon is the author of the classics Blue Highways and PrairyErth . He lives near the Missouri River outside Columbia, Missouri, where he is casting about for his next adventure. Klappentext The author of Blue Highways and PrairyErth "takes us on a lifetime voyage full of imagery, insight and appreciation." -- Cleveland Plain Dealer In his most ambitious journey ever, William Least Heat-Moon sets off aboard a small boat named Nikawa ("river horse" in Osage) from the Atlantic at New York Harbor in hopes of entering the Pacific near Astoria, Oregon. He and his companion, Pilotis, struggle to cover some 5,000 watery miles, often following in the wakes of our most famous explorers, from Henry Hudson to Lewis and Clark. En route, the voyagers confront massive floods, dangerous weather, and their own doubts about whether they can complete the trip. But the hard days yield incomparable pleasures: generous strangers, landscapes untouched since Sacajawea saw them, riverscapes flowing with a lively past, and the growing belief that efforts to protect our lands and waters are beginning to pay off. Teeming with humanity, humor, and high adventure, River-Horse is an unsentimental and original arteriogram of our nation at the millennium. Chapter One A Celestial Call to Board For about half a league after we came out of the little harbor on Newark Bay at Elizabeth, New Jersey — with its strewn alleys and broken buildings, its pervading aura of collapse, where the mayor himself had met us at the dock and stood before a podium his staff fetched up for him to set his speech on, words to launch us on that Earth Day across the continent as he reminded us of history here, of George Washington on nearly the same date being rowed across to New York City on the last leg of his inaugural journey — and for the half league down the Kill Van Kull (there Henry Hudson lost a sailor to an arrow through the neck), we had to lay in behind a rusting Norwegian freighter heading out to sea with so little cargo that her massive props were no more than half in the water and slapping up a thunderous wake and thrashing such a roil it sent our little teakettle of a boat rolling fore and aft. I quickly throttled back, and the following sea picked up our stern and threatened to ride over the low transom into the welldeck. We had no bilge pump to empty it, and the cabin door stood hooked open to the bright blue April morning and the sea air of New York Bay. My copilot roared, "Don't cut the motors so fast when we're riding a swell! You'll swamp us!" Only ten minutes out, we were nearly on our way to the bottom, sixty feet below. I turned toward the stern to see the bay rear above the transom just before the water raised Nikawa high enough to let the next wave ride under and shove her fast toward the chopping props of the freighter. Then her bow slipped down the other side of the swell, we pulled away from the big screws, and I idled to let the deep-water tramp move ahead until I got an open lane on her port side. We pushed past, cut through the wake of the Staten Island Ferry, and headed on toward the Atlantic. "And that's how it begins," said my friend, a blue-water sailor, one whom I shall call Pilotis (rhymes with "my lotus"). It wasn't, of course, the beginning, for who can say where a voyage starts — not the actual passage but the dream of a journey and its urge to find a way? For this trip I can speak of a possible inception: I am a reader of maps, not usually nautical charts but road maps. I...
Product details
Authors | William Least Heat Moon, William Least Least Heat-Moon Heat-Moon, William Least Heat-Moon |
Publisher | Penguin Books USA |
Languages | English |
Product format | Paperback / Softback |
Released | 01.04.2001 |
EAN | 9780140298604 |
ISBN | 978-0-14-029860-4 |
No. of pages | 528 |
Dimensions | 140 mm x 213 mm x 29 mm |
Subject |
Travel
> Travelogues, traveller's tales
> North and Central America
|
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