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Above the Fall Line cover

$24.95t, Cloth

160 pages, 51/2 x 81/2

978-0-86554-901-2

H664

Above the Fall Line
The Trail from White Pine Cabin

Amy Blackmarr

A brilliant essayist’s journey inward

Amy Blackmarr returns to her native Georgia as a 'refugee,' fleeing a bleak Kansas winter, the trauma of graduate school, and a 'loss of identity, confidence, boyfriend and best dog and pride.' Now White Pine Cabin, a hut barely big enough to turn around in, becomes the setting for Blackmarr’s searing self-examination as she tells the stories that have led her so far inward and works out a trail back toward a happier connection with herself, the land, her God, and the people in her world. With an irony that keeps her prose from sinking into sentiment, Blackmarr writes of her dishonesty in a lost relationship, flunking her graduate exams, the inborn racism she was surprised to discover, and the loss of her beloved dog Max. But her enduring love for the land brings needed beauty and balance, and her sense of humor won’t let us get away without hearing about the ghost by the creek, the bear that comes for her pork roast, the mice that eat a rat snake, and the landfill that swallows her car. Finally, when Blackmarr allows herself to move outside her solitude she always discovers the world’s unexpected generosity, and it is this gift that helps heal her and make her aware of the art we create in the interwoven kindnesses we pay each other.

'It was a winter day, cold and sunny and fragrant with wet leaves, when I came to live in Uncle Johnny’s Blue Ridge Mountain cabin for a while. I did not plan to stay?. But the raw-boned earnestness of this mountain country, its honest and uncritical affection, took me by surprise? Hiking down the hill to the spring U.J. had told me about, I stepped over a fallen pine, and its fragrance brought me up short, as though I’d remembered something I had forgotten.'

Amy Blackmarr is a South Georgia native who lived in the Midwest for twenty years. She is best known for her nature essays set in the rustic houses she lived in. Her essays have been broadcast on Georgia Gazette, a weekly features show on the Georgia Public Radio Network, as well as Up to Date, a weekly news show on Kansas City’s NPR affiliate. She is a Madison Self Fellow with a Ph.D. in English from the University of Kansas and presently lives in the North Georgia mountains.

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