Tim Gilmore

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Mary Jones
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Tim Gilmore

Goodreads Author


Born
in Jacksonville, Florida, The United States
Website

Genre

Member Since
August 2012


Tim Gilmore is the author of several books.

Tim Gilmore hasn't written any blog posts yet.

Average rating: 3.88 · 156 ratings · 30 reviews · 29 distinct worksSimilar authors
Devil in the Baptist Church...

3.63 avg rating — 32 ratings
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We Are All Used Books: (70 ...

3.75 avg rating — 16 ratings
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Stalking Ottis Toole: A Sou...

4.07 avg rating — 14 ratings — published 2013
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The Mad Atlas of Virginia King

4.27 avg rating — 11 ratings — published 2015 — 3 editions
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This Kind of City: Ghost St...

4.60 avg rating — 10 ratings — published 2012 — 2 editions
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In Search of Eartha White, ...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 5 ratings — published 2014 — 2 editions
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Repossessions: Mass Shootin...

3.50 avg rating — 4 ratings
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Goat Island Hermit: The Sta...

4.33 avg rating — 3 ratings
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Channeling Anna Fletcher

4.33 avg rating — 3 ratings
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The Wilderness and Willie B...

4.33 avg rating — 3 ratings
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More books by Tim Gilmore…
Native Guard: Poems
Tim is currently reading
bookshelves: currently-reading
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Death in Venice
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Quotes by Tim Gilmore  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“Nothing truly beautiful without its element of strangeness, nothing whole without its own incongruity, these (Jacksonville-area pioneer house) ruins sand up from the earth in sacred conjunction. These ruins conjoin the earth and the manmade, moving from one to the other and back again. The Browards built their house out of shell and limestone, and limestone forms naturally from the shells and skeletons of miniscule sea creatures over great periods of time. The Browards shaped the earth upright toward the sky. THey shaped it with doorframes and windows and chimneys. THey shaped the earth up around them as a shelter. But shaped earth was always the earth. Now the walls fall back down and join once again the ground, taken over by roots of ferns and weeds and small trees. The house was always the ground, only contained in an upward suspension. The house was always the earth, but brought up into architecture, and now the house that was always the earth crumbles back into the earth and nourishes new green things -- dog fennel and morning glories and palmettoes and cabbage palms and cedars. A true symbol of sacredness of the earth is earth's reclaiming of human ingenuity.”
Tim Gilmore This Kind of City Ghost stories and psychological landscapes

“Most human beings come into the world and leave it with nothing to show they ever lived.”
Tim Gilmore

“Behind a barbed-wire fence, a dirt road disappears into the distance in the pine trees and corners. Lost, dead roads, no ends or remaining purposes, power lines now dead and sagging and forgotten, grown high in weeds and young trees. The trees have entirely encased a speed limit sign, strange sight, nothing so pointless as a speed limit sign in the midst of dense woods, pointless and beautifully so.”
Tim Gilmore This Kind of City Ghost stories and psychological landscapes

“If the creek predates the city deep in time, then is it right to identify the creek solely with the city? The city has forgotten the creek, as it's forgotten those who walk its side, but the creek didn't need to be known all that long time before the city ever was. Maybe now Hogan's Creek is too steeped in history to claim an independence grounded in prehistory, because the city has too deeply poisoned it for far too long. Then again, there was all that time the creek flowed and had no name. Without a name you belong solely to yourself.”
Tim Gilmore

“Behind a barbed-wire fence, a dirt road disappears into the distance in the pine trees and corners. Lost, dead roads, no ends or remaining purposes, power lines now dead and sagging and forgotten, grown high in weeds and young trees. The trees have entirely encased a speed limit sign, strange sight, nothing so pointless as a speed limit sign in the midst of dense woods, pointless and beautifully so.”
Tim Gilmore This Kind of City Ghost stories and psychological landscapes

“As the soil of a garden is richer and as the harvest of the garden bears healthier nourishment from the decay of leaf matter and banana peel and egg shell and human hair and chicken bone and fireplace ash, so the accumulation of death in teh ground of a city implants therein energies and powers.”
Tim Gilmore This Kind of City Ghost stories and psychological landscapes

“Most human beings come into the world and leave it with nothing to show they ever lived.”
Tim Gilmore

“Nothing truly beautiful without its element of strangeness, nothing whole without its own incongruity, these (Jacksonville-area pioneer house) ruins sand up from the earth in sacred conjunction. These ruins conjoin the earth and the manmade, moving from one to the other and back again. The Browards built their house out of shell and limestone, and limestone forms naturally from the shells and skeletons of miniscule sea creatures over great periods of time. The Browards shaped the earth upright toward the sky. THey shaped it with doorframes and windows and chimneys. THey shaped the earth up around them as a shelter. But shaped earth was always the earth. Now the walls fall back down and join once again the ground, taken over by roots of ferns and weeds and small trees. The house was always the ground, only contained in an upward suspension. The house was always the earth, but brought up into architecture, and now the house that was always the earth crumbles back into the earth and nourishes new green things -- dog fennel and morning glories and palmettoes and cabbage palms and cedars. A true symbol of sacredness of the earth is earth's reclaiming of human ingenuity.”
Tim Gilmore This Kind of City Ghost stories and psychological landscapes

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