John Graves
Born
in The United States
August 06, 1920
Died
July 31, 2013
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Goodbye to a River: A Narrative
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published
1959
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56 editions
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Hard Scrabble: Observations on a Patch of Land
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published
1974
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19 editions
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From a Limestone Ledge: Some Essays and Other Ruminations About Country Life in Texas
by
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published
1980
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10 editions
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Texas Rivers
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published
2002
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5 editions
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My Dogs and Guns
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published
2007
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7 editions
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Myself and Strangers: A Memoir of Apprenticeship
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published
2004
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8 editions
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A John Graves Reader (Southwestern Writers Collection Series, Wittliff Collections at Texas State University)
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published
1996
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4 editions
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Texas Hill Country
by
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published
2003
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5 editions
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The Last Running
by
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published
1990
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10 editions
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Death by Design (Tracker, #1)
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“Neither a land nor a people ever starts over clean. Country is compact of all its past disasters and strokes of luck–of flood and drouth, of the caprices of glaciers and sea winds, of misuse and disuse and greed and ignorance and wisdom–and though you may doze away the cedar and coax back the bluestem and mesquite grass and side-oats grama, you're not going to manhandle it into anything entirely new. It's limited by what it has been, by what's happened to it. And a people, until that time when it's uprooted and scattered and so mixed with other peoples that it has in fact perished, is much the same in this as land. It inherits.”
― Goodbye to a River: A Narrative
― Goodbye to a River: A Narrative
“Of all the passers-through, the species that means most to me, even more than geese and cranes, is the upland plover, the drab plump grassland bird that used to remind my gentle hunting uncle of the way things once had been, as it still reminds me. It flies from the far Northern prairies to the pampas of Argentina and then back again in spring, a miracle of navigation and a tremendous journey for six or eight ounces of flesh and feathers and entrails and hollow bones, fueled with bug meat. I see them sometimes in our pastures, standing still or dashing after prey in the grass, but mainly I know their presence through the mournful yet eager quavering whistles they cast down from the night sky in passing, and it makes me think of what the whistling must have been like when the American plains were virgin and their plover came through in millions. To grow up among tradition-minded people leads one often into backward yearnings and regrets, unprofitable feelings of which I was granted my share in youth-not having been born in time to get killed fighting Yankees, for one, or not having ridden up the cattle trails. But the only such regret that has strongly endured is not to have known the land when when it was whole and sprawling and rich and fresh, and the plover that whet one's edge every spring and every fall. In recent decades it has become customary- and right, I guess, and easy enough with hindsight- to damn the ancestral frame of mind that ravaged the world so fully and so soon. What I myself seem to damn mainly, though, is just not having seen it. Without any virtuous hindsight, I would likely have helped in the ravaging as did even most of those who loved it best. But God, to have viewed it entire, the soul and guts of what we had and gone forever now, except in books and such poignant remnants as small swift birds that journey to and from the distant Argentine and call at night in the sky.”
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“If a man couldn't escape what he came from, we would most of us still be peasants in Old World hovels. But, if, having escaped or not, he wants in some way to know himself, define himself, and tries to do it without taking into account the thing he came from, he is writing without any ink in his pen. The provincial who cultivates only his roots is in peril, potato-like, of becoming more root than plant. The man who cuts his roots away and denies that they were ever connected with him withers into half a man.”
― Goodbye to a River: A Narrative
― Goodbye to a River: A Narrative
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Topics Mentioning This Author
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