Media Reviews
Price is a gifted writer. . . . His journey leaves him transformed as it may well transform the reader. -Booklist * Booklist *
In consecutive chapters about nature writers of the disappearing grasslands of the Great Plains, Price seamlessly combines several literary modes. . . . Price shows a talent for asking the right questions and for listening carefully and critically to his subjects. -Choice * Choice *
From the first captivating `calligraphic figure of a blue heron' the reader will be bound with Price on his journey to connect with the land. . . . Price's personal and literary journey is a deftly woven tapestry that connects all who have chosen to rest for a moment or two in the great sea of grass, and invites those who have not to experience that natural history of the grasslands. -Jean Snodgress Wiedenheft, Wapsipinicon Almanac -- Jean Snodgress Wiedenheft * Wapsipinicon Almanac *
This 'memoir' is grassland exploration and ecology literature search at its best. . . . Price's insightful questions and sense of humor make the book's subject highly accessible and memorable. Great Plains enthusiasts, as well as those wanting to understand this often-overlooked region. . . .'where surprises can live and grow,' will delight in his extensive use of quotations from well-known writers. -Twyla Hansen, The NCB News -- Twyla Hansen * The NCB News *
Price cleverly invites his readers to join him, as he drives across the plains, visiting and interviewing those prairie conservationists whose books he has admired. Along the way, he integrates his own thinking, his reading of the prairie classics into the conversations that he has with his unseen readers. . . . The message of Not Just Any Land is idealistic, emotional, and strongly appealing, presented with good humor and a living perspective. -Glenn M. Busset, The Manhattan Mercury -- Glenn M. Busset * The Manhattan Mercury *
The personal and literary dimensions of his journey through the American grasslands provide a thoughtful and very readable contribution to the ongoing discussion about regionalism and the ethical responsibilities of regional and environmental writers. -Western American Literature * Western American Literature *
Price makes an important contribution to the community of writers who care about the landscapes that have become places of solitude, healing, and home. . . . A personal narrative, imbued with vivid prose and keen insight. -Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature & Environment * Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature & Environment *
A curious and enjoyable blend of diverse elements. It is partly a book of nature, a quest to create `a new connection to my home landscape. . . . a grasslands bioregion I'd lived in all my life but never seen, never known.' It is partly a literary survey, with extended interviews with influential Great Plains writers. . . . It is more memoir than scholarly treatise-a series of physical journeys to remote corners of the prairie states, and a more personal journey of self-discovery and a growing sense of place. -David Bristow, Nebraska Center for the Book -- David Bristow
In this well-researched and image-filled memoir, Price takes readers on a spiritual journey to rediscover the land. As he visits with contemporary nature writers and explores the effect that nature has on the soul, Price touches on the importance of preserving the grasslands. -Kansas! * Kansas! *
Although the focus of Price's first full-length work is on the writings of four Great Plains writers, his discovery of his relationship with this complex, beautiful, and damaged environment forms his work's narrative. . . . Through his pilgrimage to the prairie and his conversations with those who intimately live with and write about its undulations and grasses, its animals and people, its memories and stories, Price comes to be able to tell his own story of caring and acting both persuasively and poetically. -Elizabeth Schultz, American Studies -- Elizabeth Schultz * American Studies *
John Price finds his way to the heart of the grasslands that our ancestors called the great inland sea. Riding and listening and reading along with him, we learn not only about the prairie, we also learn how to be at home in our own place. -Scott Russell Sanders, author of Hunting for Hope -- Scott Russell Sanders
Price's considerable wisdom and poetic vision spring from both the prairie and great prairie books. With nature as his compass and literature as his map, he conducts us on a powerful journey not just in the American grasslands, but in understanding the relationship between our identity and the places that blood and history define for us as home. -Julene Bair, author of One Degree West: Reflections of a Plainsdaughter -- Julene Bair
What does a hot tub on a nature writer's ranch say about wildness? How does one begin to make a home in a ravaged ecosystem? French fries or bull fries? What can the prairie awaken in writers-including the author of this marvelous pilgrimage? These and other questions help John Price avoid the usual paeans and bromides that fill too much contemporary nature writing. Price puts himself on the line by showing us how he is trying to understand the place he's from-and where he wishes to live as an ecological citizen. Part of that process is visiting with writers who have made the grasslands their home. His dispatches from these encounters-literary and personal-can help all of us understand failings, desires, complications. And, despite Joyce Carol Oates's declaration that nature writers lack a sense of humor, John Price gives us moments of genuine, self-deprecating humor, which, in his hands, is also wisdom. -Christopher Cokinos, author of Hope Is the Thing with Feathers: A Personal Chronicle of Vanished Birds -- Christopher Cokinos