EBOOK

A Desert Harvest

New and Selected Essays

Bruce Berger
5
(1)
Pages
272
Year
2019
Language
English

About

A career-spanning collection of Bruce Berger's beautiful, subtle, and spiky essays on the American desert

Occupying a space between traditional nature writing, memoir, journalism, and prose poetry, Bruce Berger's essays are beautiful, subtle, and haunting meditations on the landscape and culture of the American Southwest. Combining new, unpublished essays with selections from his acclaimed trilogy of "desert books"-The Telling Distance, There Was a River, and Almost an Island-A Desert Harvest is a career-spanning selection of the best work by this unique and undervalued voice.

Wasteland architecture, mountaintop astronomy, Bach in the wilderness, the mind of the wood rat, the canals of Phoenix, and the numerous eccentric personalities who call the desert their home all come to life in these fascinating portraits of America's seemingly desolate terrains.

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Reviews

"A Desert Harvest renders Berger's travels across the Southwest and down through Baja California Sur with plenty of charm and a comic sense for the surreal, but it also leaps beyond: into questions of water use or the substance of time . . . The book places him among the best of past generations to write about the Southwest."
Sean McCoy, The Los Angeles Times
"Captures the myriad ways the southwest desert casts a spell."
National Geographic
"Berger is a chronicler of desert life in all its forms, from the cactuses to life in the small towns of the Southwest. [A Desert Harvest] spans a career of over 30 years, leaving readers with an impressionistic picture of a distinctly American ecology."
The New York Times Book Review

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