Add this copy of Wendell Berry: Life and Work (Culture of the Land) to cart. $22.50, very good condition, Sold by Gate City Books rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Greensboro, NC, UNITED STATES, published 2007 by University Press of Kentucky.
Add this copy of Wendell Berry: Life and Work to cart. $25.00, very good condition, Sold by Grendel Books, ABAA/ILAB rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Springfield, MA, UNITED STATES, published 2007 by University of Kentucky Press,.
Add this copy of Wendell Berry: Life and Work to cart. $28.50, like new condition, Sold by Enterprise Books rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Chicago, IL, UNITED STATES, published 2007 by University Press of Kentucky.
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Seller's Description:
Fine+ in Fine+ dust jacket. 0813124425. Book and DJ Very Fine. NO notes of ANY kind. Not clipped ($35); Inscribed and signed by editor Peters at title page.; Culture Of The Land; Tall 8vo; 349 pages.
Add this copy of Wendell Berry: Life and Work (Culture of the Land: a to cart. $35.00, like new condition, Sold by Eighth Day Books rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Wichita, KS, UNITED STATES, published 2007 by University Press of Kentucky.
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As New. The 27 essays collected here pay tribute to America's finest agrarian writer: poet, novelist, social critic, and visionary Wendell Berry. Bill McKibben, Scott Russell Sanders, and Eric Freyfogle are among the contributors who explore aspects of the many concerns Berry has so eloquently addressed over four decades: consumerism, war, human-scale agriculture, community, marriage and sexuality, the politics of place. Long-time friends Wes Jackson, Gene Logsdon, Hayden Carruth, and Donald Hall delight us with warm, personal glimpses of the man-his humor, his family, his never-ending correspondence, his love for his Kentucky farm. Berry's Bible-based spirituality and often uneasy relationship with organized religion are discussed by several writers including Jason Peters, who finds in Berry's vision of mind and body an intuitively orthodox, anti-Manichean theology. Over and over, these writers (several of whom choose to reside, like Berry, in out-of-the-way corners of America's heartland) express gratitude to Berry for his profound influence not only on how they think, but how they choose to live their lives. From Barbara Kingsolver's humorous attempts to practice 'The Art of Buying Nothing'-her motto: 'What Would Wendell Do (WWWD)? '-to David Kline's 'How Wendell Berry Single-Handedly Preserved Three Hundred Years of Agrarian Wisdom, ' this book inspires us to pick up Berry's work and read it again and again. 349 pp.