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Meditations on Nature, Meditations on Silence

Roderick MacIver

$32.99

Paperback

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English
North Atlantic Books,U.S.
15 July 2011
Similar in format and approach to Thoreau and the Art of Life and Earth, My Likeness and drawing on art, poetry, interviews, and book excerpts, Meditations on Nature, Meditations on Silence explores the beauty and mystery of the natural world and reminds us of the significance of the gift of life.

Meditations on Nature, Meditations on Silence is a collection of hundreds of quotes on the beauty and mystery of the natural world by writers and thinkers, including Aldo Leopold, Rachel Carson, Edward Abbey, Rainer Maria Rilke, Henry David Thoreau, Louise Dickinson Rich, and Lewis Thomas.

Through their inspirational poetry and other writings and Rod MacIver's beautiful watercolors, Meditations on Nature, Meditations on Silence offers readers a retreat from our complex, fast-paced world. This book explores the beauty, strange cohesion, and complexity of the natural world and universe, drawing on sources as diverse as ancient Chinese poets, contemporary songwriters, wilderness adventurers, homesteaders, and modern scientists.
Edited by:  
Imprint:   North Atlantic Books,U.S.
Country of Publication:   United States [Currently unable to ship to USA: see Shipping Info]
Dimensions:   Height: 215mm,  Width: 216mm,  Spine: 7mm
Weight:   340g
ISBN:   9781556439162
ISBN 10:   1556439164
Pages:   96
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Roderick MacIver is a Canadian-born watercolor artist whose artwork has been acquired by public and private collectors. Many of his paintings have been used by wilderness protection groups and nonprofit organizations in their outreach efforts. In 1995, he founded Heron Dance (www.herondance.org), a nonprofit organization that celebrates the human connection to nature through art and words.

Reviews for Meditations on Nature, Meditations on Silence

An American banker adrift in Venice takes up with an older woman - centuries older - whom he encounters while meandering through the city's labyrinth of back streets, in an erotically charged, dreamlike third novel from Girardi (Madeleine's Ghost, 1995; The Pirate's Daughter, 1997). Jack Squire, a foreign exchange trader in Washington, D.C., is handed a plum assignment: to study Italian politics in Venice so that his bank can make a killing on the lira after the upcoming national elections. But once he arrives, something about the city won't let him sleep, or do his job properly. In the wee hours one morning, after yet another night of insomnia, Jack meets Caterina, who's feeding a yowling horde of the famous Venetian alley cats, and he's stunned by her pale, ethereal beauty. In subsequent meetings, Caterina tells him nothing about herself, but eventually she takes him to meet some of her friends, who are every bit as mysterious as she. By day Jack bungles his reports to Washington; by night he and Caterina become lovers, so that his nocturnal adventures with her are soon all he really cares about. A disastrous business meeting with his boss in Milan seems to signal the end of his career, until he discovers that he can somehow read imminent death in the other man's eyes, leaving the boss so unnerved that he spares Jack the ax. Soon after, Caterina stops seeing him, but he manages to find the place where she feeds cats again and trail her on her way home, finally spotting her as she boards a vaporetto with all of her weird friends. Jack later reaches the vaporetto's destination - and has his worst fears about the love of his life confirmed. For as long as tale's dream state is sustained, the result is exquisite and eerie. But the last third, involving a retirement home in Arizona and a new career in Bar Harbor, Maine, ranges far from Venice - and breaks the spell. (Kirkus Reviews)


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