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Be sure to read Hal Borland's other bestselling classics-Hal Borland's Twelve Moons of the Year (hardcover, ISBN 978-1-63561-901-0); paperback, ISBN 978-1-63561-900-3) and Book of Days (hardcover, ISBN 978-1-63561-760-3; paperback, ISBN 978-1-63561-759-7), published by Echo Point Books. Living in a world circumscribed by up-to-the-minute news and electronic tools we barely master before they are out-of-date, we attempt to shield ourselves from environmental events which threaten to overturn our constructed reality. Naturally, in such fast-paced and topsy-turvy surroundings we watch the sky and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Be sure to read Hal Borland's other bestselling classics-Hal Borland's Twelve Moons of the Year (hardcover, ISBN 978-1-63561-901-0); paperback, ISBN 978-1-63561-900-3) and Book of Days (hardcover, ISBN 978-1-63561-760-3; paperback, ISBN 978-1-63561-759-7), published by Echo Point Books. Living in a world circumscribed by up-to-the-minute news and electronic tools we barely master before they are out-of-date, we attempt to shield ourselves from environmental events which threaten to overturn our constructed reality. Naturally, in such fast-paced and topsy-turvy surroundings we watch the sky and earth for signs of regularity; looking to the changing seasons for hope and rejuvenation, and seeking out the voices of those who speak of constancy in the changes of the natural world. Hal Borland was such a voice. Every week, beginning in 1941, in the editorial pages of The New York Times he would speak of living on the land-this natural world we all try to understand. In this collection of 365 of his essays, arranged daily within the twelve months, he writes with a familiarity of the ways of the country that is at once humble and resiliently knowledgeable. In Sundial of the Seasons you will find page-long ruminations on such topics as "Fog" ("a unique blend of mood and weather"), "The Bumblebee" ("Bumblebees tolerate man, up to a point"), "Dandelions" ("Neither flood nor drouth seems to discourage it"), and "Fishing" ("The fish caught are only a lesser part of the catch"), all in celebration of the everyday events of life in the country. Begin each day with the gentle wit and wisdom of the person who, for nearly four decades, wrote his "outdoor editorials" in an engaging and inimitable fashion eagerly read by thousands.
Autorenporträt
Hal Borland's first outdoor essay appeared in The New York Times in the fall of 1941 and since then he has published some 1,200 more, many of them having been reprinted in anthologies and English textbooks. The essays have continued through the years to draw a large reader mail-from all over the United States and occasionally from abroad.Mr. Borland and his wife, author Barbara Dodge Borland, have lived for the past several years on their farm in Connecticut's lower Berkshire Hills. He was born in Nebraska; much of his boyhood was spent on a homestead in eastern Colorado - recaptured memorably in one of his most popular books, High, Wide and Lonesome. He was graduated from the Columbia School of Journalism and received a Litt.D. degree from the University of Colorado in 1944.Hal Borland has written another book of outdoor essays, This Hill. This Valley; three novels, When the Legends Die. The Seventh Winter, and The Amulet; a book about his dog Pat, The Dog Who Came to Stay; and a tale of the first Christmas, The Youngest Shepherd.