Abstract

This is an anthology of nearly four centuries of nature writing about one of America's premier regions-the Blue Ridge Mountains and Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. Beginning with Captain John Smith's eager gaze westward in search of gold and ending with contemporary essayist John Daniel's transformative gaze inward in search of wilderness, The Height of our Mountains features work of seventy of nation's finest writers on nature, from 1607 to 1997. Responding to Thomas Jefferson's claim in Notes on State of Virginia that the height of our mountains has not yet been estimated with any degree of exactness, Branch and Philippon have gathered a diverse collection of written perspectives on region in an effort to measure remarkable richness of this landscape through a variety of literary forms and styles. The result is a wide-ranging survey that includes colonial narratives of William Byrd and George Washington, as well as natural histories of John Bartram and John James Audubon; travel narratives of King Louis Philippe of France and diaries and memoirs of Cornelia Peake McDonald, Walt Whitman, and John Burroughs; works of fiction by Edgar Allen Poe and Willa Cather; speeches by James Madison, Herbert Hover, and Franklin Roosevelt; and contemporary writings by Donald Culcross Peattie, Edwin Way Teale, Roger Tory Peterson, Annie Dillard, Donald McCaig, Peter Svenson, and Jake Page. The book contains a lengthy and detailed introduction on character and form of nature writing, concepts of place and bioregionalism, and literary natural history of Blue Ridge country itself. Ample notes, beautiful illustrations and amps, and a lengthy bibliography make this book a lasting treasure.

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