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An Inside Passage, An Inside Passage, 0803232144, 0-8032-3214-4, 978-0-8032-3214-3, 9780803232143, Kurt Caswell
, River Teeth Literary Nonfiction Prize, An Inside Passage, 0803225202, 0-8032-2520-2, 978-0-8032-2520-6, 9780803225206, Kurt Caswell
, River Teeth Literary Nonfiction Priz
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Although finding a way to feel at home in the world is ultimately the life’s work of us all, rarely has the search ranged as far or found as precise and moving an expression as it does in An Inside Passage. Winner of the 2008 River Teeth Literary Nonfiction Prize, Kurt Caswell’s narrative chronicles his travels in the rugged mountain forests of Japan’s Shiretoko National Park, on a vision quest in Death Valley, and to the sacred waters of the Ganges River. Whether contemplating a great blue heron as it rests riverside at the onset of a storm, reflecting on a beloved student’s untimely death, walking through the Navajo reservation, or receiving the blessing of a Hindu priest, Caswell unerringly finds the moment of truth. His journey also takes us across the landscape of his marriage, both its initial sweetness and its eventual failure. The ensuing inner dislocation echoes a larger estrangement that makes more poignant Caswell’s quest to find a place he can call home.

Kurt Caswell is an assistant professor of creative writing and literature in the Honors College at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Texas. His essays have appeared in numerous publications, including Isotope, Ninth Letter, Northern Lights, Potomac Review, and Matter.

"In these luminous essays on wanderlust, Caswell . . . embraces travel writer Bruce Chatwin's contention that walking is a poetic act that can cure the world of its ills. . . . His travels culminate in a Death Valley vision that replaces his pervasive sense of dislocation with the answer to a question that has nagged him for years: what is home? "—Publishers Weekly (Starred Review) “[Caswell is] more the inspired prose poet of the outdoor garden we all inhabit, describing it more beautifully than most, as when, after monsoon rains come in the fall, ‘the flowers want to bloom again in a second coming: desert globemallow, blue dick, storksbill, sacred datura, chicory, paintbrush, beardtongue and Arizona lupine. Some cacti, too: prickly pear and desert barrel. The acacia or catclaw, and mesquite roll out of the dry washes, entangling anything, dog or man or javalina, that tries to pass.’ They caught me.”—Alan Cheuse, Dallas Morning News “The author moves from place to place, examining the natural world around him with scrupulous care and a keen, sympathetic eye, and examining even more intensely the seasonal transformations in his own heart and mind. By the end, I felt I had traveled along with him, sharing his sorrows and his epiphanies, his vigor and courage and ceaseless quest for experience and understanding. This is a memoir of extraordinary revelation, which transforms the reader as well as the author.”—Lynne Sharon Schwartz, author of Ruined by Reading: A Life in Books “Kurt Caswell has mastered the noble tradition of the essay as walk-around, and he reads the contours of the land, his mind, and the urgency of companions who sometimes choose to accompany him on his solo journey with delicacy, generosity and a sharp attentiveness to the possibility of new life, in all its harmonious contradictions. This is lovely writing and musing.”—Phillip Lopate, author of The Art of the Personal Essay and Totally, Tenderly, Tragically “A fine debut by a new voice in American nature writing.”—Dennis Covington, author of Salvation on Sand Mountain

Winner of the River Teeth Literary Nonfiction Prize
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