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The Lost Woods. Stories.
H. William Rice
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Description for The Lost Woods. Stories.
A collection of essays following lives of two families who own land and hunt in rural South Carolina Num Pages: 176 pages. BIC Classification: FYB. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 216 x 152 x 20. Weight in Grams: 386.
The Lost Woods is a collection of fifteen short stories, most of them set in and around the fictional small town of Sledge, South Carolina. The events narrated in the stories begin in the 1930s and continue to the present day. The stories aren't accounts of hunting methods or legends of trophy kills--they are serious stories about hunting that are similar in style to William Faulkner's Go Down, Moses. The collection traces the evolution of two families--the Whites and the Chapmans--as well as the changes in hunting and land use of the past eighty years.
Some of these stories are narrated in third person; others are told by a wide range of characters, from grown men and women to children, but only from one perspective--that of the hunter. As they walk the woods in search of turkeys, deer, or raccoons, these characters seek something more than food. They seek a lost connection to some part of themselves. The title ""the lost woods"" is adapted from Cherokee myths and stories wherein people must return again and again to the woods to find animals that were lost. Thereby, we find not only food, but who we are.
Through these stories Rice reminds us that hunting is inextricably entwined with identity. As one of the oldest rituals that we as a species know, it reflects both our nobility and our depravity. Through it we return again and again to find the lost woods inside ourselves.
Some of these stories are narrated in third person; others are told by a wide range of characters, from grown men and women to children, but only from one perspective--that of the hunter. As they walk the woods in search of turkeys, deer, or raccoons, these characters seek something more than food. They seek a lost connection to some part of themselves. The title ""the lost woods"" is adapted from Cherokee myths and stories wherein people must return again and again to the woods to find animals that were lost. Thereby, we find not only food, but who we are.
Through these stories Rice reminds us that hunting is inextricably entwined with identity. As one of the oldest rituals that we as a species know, it reflects both our nobility and our depravity. Through it we return again and again to find the lost woods inside ourselves.
Product Details
Publication date
2014
Publisher
University of South Carolina Press United States
Number of pages
176
Condition
New
Number of Pages
176
Format
Hardback
Place of Publication
South Carolina, United States
ISBN
9781611173291
SKU
V9781611173291
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-1
About H. William Rice
H. William Rice is the chair of the English Department at Kennesaw State University, USA. An avid outdoorsman, he has written stories about hunting and fishing that have appeared in a number of publications, including Gray's Sporting Journal and Sporting Classics. He is the author of two books as well as many essays on an array of subjects. The Lost Woods is his first work of fiction.
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