,
Scott Russell Sanders

more photos (2)

year in books

Scott Russell Sanders’s Followers (128)

member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
Eva
Eva
1,279 books | 32 friends


Scott Russell Sanders

Goodreads Author


Born
in Memphis, Tennessee, The United States
Website

Genre

Influences
Wendell Berry, Henry David Thoreau, Rachel Carson, Aldo Leopold, Gary ...more

Member Since
May 2015


Scott Russell Sanders is the award-winning author of A Private History of Awe, Hunting for Hope, A Conservationist Manifesto, Dancing in Dreamtime, and two dozen other books of fiction, personal narrative, and essays. His father came from a family of cotton farmers in Mississippi, his mother from an immigrant doctor’s family in Chicago. He spent his early childhood in Tennessee and his school years in Ohio, Rhode Island, and Cambridge, England.

In his writing he is concerned with our place in nature, the practice of community, and the search for a spiritual path. He and his wife, Ruth, a biochemist, have reared two children in their hometown of Bloomington, in the hardwood hill country of southern Indiana. You can visit Scott at www.scottru
...more

Popular Answered Questions

Scott Russell Sanders And hello to you, Jay Mac, from the hill country of southern Indiana. I suspect you are a lifelong reader, as I am, and so you will understand when I …moreAnd hello to you, Jay Mac, from the hill country of southern Indiana. I suspect you are a lifelong reader, as I am, and so you will understand when I say that I have many favorite writers, and the ones I turn to most frequently have changed over time. My earliest enthusiasm was for Mark Twain, whose work I still love. As a teenager, I read a lot of southern writers, such as William Faulkner, Flannery O'Connor, and Robert Penn Warren. In college I became fascinated by the American Transcendentalists, especially Thoreau and Emerson, along with their contemporaries, Melville and Whitman, to all of whom I have returned to ever since. Because of my interest in ethics and social issues, I read works by James Baldwin and Thomas Merton, and I began developing an interest in Buddhism, which led me to Gary Snyder and Peter Matthiessen, and all of those writers still matter a great deal to me. During my four years in graduate school at Cambridge, I made up slightly for my ignorance of British literature by steeping myself in works by Thomas Hardy, Joseph Conrad, D. H. Lawrence, Virginia Woolf, and George Orwell. Back in the States, where I becamve a university teacher, I began adding what some people call "nature writers" and I call "Earth writers" to my shortlist of favorites: Wendell Berry, Annie, Dillard, Barry Lopez, Terry Tempest Williams, Wallace Stegner, Mary Oliver, Loren Eiseley, and Aldo Leopold. Because I'm an American writer, I am drawn primarily to writers from my own country; but I also admire the work of Italo Calvino, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Pablo Neruda, Jorge Luis Borges, Primo Levi, Thich Nhat Hanh, and--closer to your home ground--Robert Macfarlane, who has written memorably about Scotland, among many other places.

Thanks for your question. Best wishes--
Scott Russell Sanders(less)
Scott Russell Sanders What I would like to write about is less of a mystery, in the who-done-it sense, than a question. I want to know what happened to the family of my mat…moreWhat I would like to write about is less of a mystery, in the who-done-it sense, than a question. I want to know what happened to the family of my maternal grandfather, Samuel Isaac Solomon. He was born in 1886, in the village of Adeh, near the western shore of Lake Urmia, in what was then Persia and is now Iran. He traced his ancestry back to the ancient Assyrians, who had ruled over most of the Middle East from roughly 900 to 600 BCE, securing and maintaining power by brutal methods typical of empires. By the time of his birth, this once-powerful people had been reduced to scattered minorities, living as Christians in predominately Muslim countries, and suffering frequent attacks motivated by religious or ethnic hostility. In the Urmia region where Samuel grew up, Assyrian settlements were frequently pillaged, livestock stolen, houses burned, and people killed. This violence may have been the chief reason that his older brother, Joseph, immigrated to the United States in 1903, and Samuel followed two years later, at age 18. They shared an apartment in Yonkers, New York. The hope was that the brothers would establish a safe new home in America, and the rest of the family—their parents and eight younger siblings—would follow. However, by the time the brothers were securely established, World War I had broken out, and they never saw or heard from their family again. What happened to those ten Solomons left behind? In October 1914, Turkish troops and Kurdish tribesmen invaded and plundered the villages of Urmia, slaughtering men, women, and children. Historians estimate that by the end of the war in 1918, 300,000 Assyrians had been killed. Were my grandfather’s family among those murdered? He died without learning the answer, and so did his daughter, my mother. That is the question I could imagine writing about. (less)
Average rating: 3.99 · 2,996 ratings · 418 reviews · 72 distinct worksSimilar authors
A Private History of Awe

4.24 avg rating — 265 ratings — published 2006 — 6 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Staying Put: Making a Home ...

3.93 avg rating — 275 ratings — published 1993 — 7 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Hunting for Hope: A Father'...

3.85 avg rating — 244 ratings — published 1998 — 9 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
The Floating House

by
3.88 avg rating — 165 ratings — published 1995 — 11 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
A Conservationist Manifesto

4.04 avg rating — 138 ratings — published 2009 — 9 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Writing from the Center

4.12 avg rating — 130 ratings — published 1995 — 8 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
The Paradise of Bombs

4.06 avg rating — 122 ratings — published 1987 — 10 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
The Way of Imagination

3.96 avg rating — 100 ratings — published 2020 — 4 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Warm As Wool

4.17 avg rating — 92 ratings — published 1992 — 11 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
The Force of Spirit

3.90 avg rating — 97 ratings — published 2000 — 6 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
More books by Scott Russell Sanders…

The Enduring Energy of Books

I grew up in a house where the only books were a dictionary, a Bible, and a motley assortment of Reader’s Digest condensed novels picked up at yard sales by my mother, who didn’t believe in spending a dollar when she could spend a dime. I rarely saw books in the homes of my friends. Their parents, like my mother and father, had come of age during the Great Depression and World War II, hard times t

Read more of this blog post »
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on June 22, 2023 11:28 Tags: collectng-books, dylan-thomas, personal-library, public-library

Scott’s Recent Updates

Scott Sanders rated a book it was amazing
The Salt Stones by Helen Whybrow
Rate this book
Clear rating
This is a wise and beautiful book. Helen Whybrow calls it “my love song to this hillside,” speaking of the Vermont farm where, for a quarter century, she has distilled wisdom from the land and its creatures—her family, the birds and trees, the flower ...more
Scott Sanders rated a book it was amazing
The Perennial Philosophy by Aldous Huxley
Rate this book
Clear rating

Aldous Huxley, best known for his dystopian novel Brave New World, wrote some fifty other books, none more challenging and rewarding than The Perennial Philosophy, an anthology of mystical writings accompanied by his extensive commentary. Published i

...more
Scott Sanders rated a book really liked it
Convictions by Marcus J. Borg
Rate this book
Clear rating

Through a series of books published over four decades, New Testament scholar Marcus Borg (1942-2015) has helped readers reimagine Christianity for a scientific and multicultural age. He was suffering from a progressive lung disease as he wrote Convic

...more
Scott Sanders rated a book it was amazing
Meeting Jesus Again for the First Time by Marcus J. Borg
Rate this book
Clear rating

This was the first of several books by New Testament scholar Marcus Borg (1942-2015) I’ve read, all of them cogent and illuminating. They have inspired me to reimagine the Christianity I absorbed as a boy from reading the Bible and attending services

...more
Scott Sanders rated a book it was amazing
A Testament of Devotion by Thomas R. Kelly
Rate this book
Clear rating

I read this luminous book for the first time in January 1981. Since then, I have reread it about once every five years or so. What keeps drawing me back? I suppose it is Thomas Kelly's unpretentious mysticism, which he expresses in plain language bef

...more
Scott Sanders rated a book liked it
The Transcendent Brain by Alan Lightman
Rate this book
Clear rating
Declaring himself a “spiritual materialist,” Alan Lightman seeks to describe and accept experiences he calls “transcendent,” while insisting that they arise entirely from material processes. As a physicist, he embraces a worldview that requires him t ...more
Scott Sanders rated a book liked it
More Than True by Robert  Bly
Rate this book
Clear rating
I like the playful, subversive, ecstatic dimensions in Robert Bly's poetry, and his translations of such wise poets as Kabir and Rilke. His writing in prose, however, can be uneven, as it is in More Than True. As in Iron John, Bly reads fairy tales i ...more
Small Marvels by Scott Russell Sanders
"I read this book of short stories, lent to me by a friend, one a day.

Sweet stories set in small town Indiana. Sure did make me smile. "
Small Marvels by Scott Russell Sanders
"What a wonderful collection of interrelated stories about the Mils family. The writing is easy to read and the stories prompt smiles and reflections."
Small Marvels by Scott Russell Sanders
"This book reminds of my favorite childhood stories. The ones where I wasn’t bombarded by the author or smothered by unnecessary language.

The story is simple and wonderful and absolutely fantastic. I’m from Indiana, and it was so special to see my wo" Read more of this review »
More of Scott's books…
Quotes by Scott Russell Sanders  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“Home is not where you have to go but where you want to go; nor is it a place where you are sullenly admitted, but rather where you are welcomed – by the people, the walls, the tiles on the floor, the followers beside the door, the play of life, the very grass.”
Scott Russell Sanders
tags: home

“When the pain of leaving behind what we know outweighs the pain of embracing it, or when the power we face is overwhelming and neither flight nor fight will save us, there may be salvation in sitting still. And if salvation is impossible, then at least before perishing we may gain a clearer vision of where we are. By sitting still I do not mean the paralysis of dread, like that of a rabbit frozen beneath the dive of a hawk. I mean something like reverence, a respectful waiting, a deep attentiveness to forces much greater than our own.”
Scott Russell Sanders

“Although "making love" may serve as a polite name for an act that has many rude ones, it's misleading. For lovers do not so much make love as they are remade by love--dipped into the fire, melted down, reshaped. If they are devoted to one another, love will transform them, dissolving the shells of their old separate selves and making them anew.”
Scott Russell Sanders, A Private History of Awe

Topics Mentioning This Author

topics posts views last activity  
Cozy Mysteries : This topic has been closed to new comments. Title and Author game, Round 3 13653 559 Apr 03, 2017 09:53AM  
Horror Aficionados : Track the short fiction you read in 2018 36 161 Jan 05, 2019 12:44PM  
What's the Name o...: ABANDONED. Floating Cities made by Goodyear Tire 13 644 Jun 28, 2019 08:23PM  
Cozy Mysteries : This topic has been closed to new comments. Mystery ABC's, Round 5 6766 353 May 14, 2020 09:27PM  
No comments have been added yet.