As paddler, flyfisher, bass fiddler, gardener, and Quaker naturalist-- SUSAN SCHMIDT writes about ecology, geology, women's ways of knowing, bluegrass music, square dancing, chestnut trees, quilting, endangered species, local food, and environmental organizing in her novel, SONG OF MOVING WATER. She has worked as science-policy analyst, sailboat captain, and professor of literature and environmental decision-making. Susan now edits books, with the same mindfulness as pruning apple trees, and walks beaches with her Boykin Spaniel. With a backdrop of the Appalachian Mountains in Virginia, Song of Moving Water is a young woman's coming-of-age story and a fictional environmental impact statement. When Grace returns to her father's homeplace seven years after his death, a proposed hydroelectric dam threatens the remote valley. Learning about farming and faith from her Aunt Ruby and about foraging herbs from neighbor Amos, Grace begins to value the self-sufficient community in contrast to her mother's social whirl in Richmond. In the country, Grace goes to a square dance at the elementary school; in the city, she goes to a debutante party at the Country Club. Grace plans on college, but her childhood friend Sally Bee is already married with two babies. Grace has a crush on Sam, aquatic ecologist and Quaker pacifist who is looking for an endangered species to stop the dam. While canoeing with Sam, Grace learns how to read a river and the Tao of water. In contrast to Sam, Grace's stepbrother Jared is a vain business student who slaps her in a political argument. With comic rivals, Amos and Farley, the half-Indian/half-Black musician up the creek, Grace goes to the Galax Fiddle Festival, and Farley competes in the fiddle contest. Reclaiming her mountain heritage, Grace organizes neighbors to celebrate their river, and she sings to protest the dam that may flood her family farm. When she skinnydips in a mountain pool, Grace accepts her growing maturity and forgives her own gracelessness. Walking the woods, Amos shows Grace the flowering shrub, Hearts-a-Busting, to remind her to keep her heart open.
Song of Running Water: Song of running water
"A spare, poetic picture book exploring the different phases of the water cycle in surprising and engaging ways"--
Midway through the medical reports, a golden eagle floats into the top of a poplar. It chitters and beats its heavy wings as it settles into the branches, keeping one eye on the road. Huge, powerful, unexpected, the eagle makes it hard ...
... running, andflying on the fingerboard, playing fragmentsof melodies andsudden chords, the music moving through him as if the bass and his body were fused. He remembers too the first year workingwith Brian, living without sleep, picking ...
"Nibi, a Native American girl, cannot get clean water from her tap or the river, so she goes on a journey to connect with fellow water protectors and get clean water for all"--
A Journey to Hope and Healing Conducted Through Music and Nature Rhonda L Muckerman. ADVANCE PRAISE Of Song and Water is one of the most moving and vulnerable books I have ever read . Rhonda's work is personal and passionate . The ...
My Friend Tad (Note: This piece was originally written as the Introduction to Tad Nichols's book, Glen Canyon: Images of a Lost World, Museum of New Mexico Press, 1999.) When I Think About Tad Nichols, most often it has something to do ...
Bethany C. Morrow's A Song Below Water is the story for today’s readers — a captivating modern fantasy about Black sirens, friendship, and self-discovery set against the challenges of today's racism and sexism.
This vibrant, provocative début novel explores the dreams and struggles of three generations of Dominican women.
... water system ? Who has built wound - like buildings all over the bodies of lakes ? It has become a habit with us to blame the sky for everything . What obstruction is coming in the way of rivers for moving towards rain - dependent ...