Over 10 mio. titler Fri fragt ved køb over 499,- Hurtig levering Forlænget returret til 31/01/25

Outermost House

- A Year of Life on the Great Beach of Cape Cod

  • Format
  • E-bog, ePub
  • 123 sider
E-bogen er DRM-beskyttet og kræver et særligt læseprogram

Beskrivelse

A rediscovered classic of American nature writing: the poetic account of a solitary year observing the wild beauty of Cape CodWith an introduction by Philip HoareA fragment of land in open ocean, the outermost beach of Cape Cod lies battered by winds and waves. It was here that the writer-naturalist Henry Beston spent a year in a tiny, two-roomed wooden house built on a solitary dune, writing his rapturous account of the changing seasons amid a vast, bright world of sea, sand and sky. Transforming the natural world into something mysterious, elemental and transcendent, Beston describes soaring clouds of migrating birds and butterflies; the primal sounds of the booming sea; luminous plankton washed ashore like stardust; the long-buried, blackened skeleton of an ancient shipwreck rising from the dunes during a winter storm; a single eagle in the endless blue. With its rhythmic, incantatory language and its heightened sensory power, The Outermost House is an American classic that changed writing about the wild: a hymn to ancient, eternal patterns of life and creation. Henry Beston (1888 1968) was born in Quincy, Massachusetts and educated at Harvard. He wrote many books in his lifetime, including a memoir of his years in the volunteer ambulance corps in the First World War, an account of life in the US Navy and a book of fairy tales. The Outermost House, widely considered his masterpiece, was published in 1928. His Cape Cod house was named a National Literary Landmark in 1964, and it was destroyed by a huge winter storm in 1978.

Læs hele beskrivelsen
Detaljer
  • Sidetal123
  • Udgivelsesdato25-07-2019
  • ISBN139781911590156
  • Forlag Faber & Faber
  • FormatePub

Findes i disse kategorier...

Se andre, der handler om...

Machine Name: SAXO082