Pattern of the Land: Exploring Home in a Changing Landscape - Perfect for Nature Lovers, Environmentalists & Home Decor Inspiration
Pattern of the Land: Exploring Home in a Changing Landscape - Perfect for Nature Lovers, Environmentalists & Home Decor Inspiration

Pattern of the Land: Exploring Home in a Changing Landscape - Perfect for Nature Lovers, Environmentalists & Home Decor Inspiration

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Description

Eileen Apperson has always felt a visceral reaction to landscapes. The one she lives in has been compromised and altered, making her relationship to this place all the more complicated. The San Joaquin Valley has gone through series of transitions to become the worlds greatest agricultural region. To reach such status, the land has gone through sweeping alterations over the past 150 years. This has been due to a series of events brought about by missionaries, trappers, cattlemen famers, and finally a growing urban population. Pattern of the Land explores each of these stages in the valley's history by describing the uniqueness of its terrain. What brings this recorder upon the land closer is that the most significant of these changes have come at the hands of her family, the first settlers in a frontier. Pattern of the Land weaves family stories with historic accounts, focusing primarily on the region where the Kings River descends the Sierra to the area that was Tulare Lake. These sketches guide her search fit home in an altered landscape. Family has been one constant in the place she has grown to appreciate and is now proud to call home.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
Eileen Apperson's "Patterns" may remind many readers of that book they always wanted to write about their own pioneer ancestors and the land which sometimes rewarded and sometimes punished them. Apperson, in telling the story of her ancestors, covers a number of the environmental and social complexities of the California Promised Land-- particularly of the miraculous and challenging great Central Valley. She writes with feeling of the loss of many of the wilder, irreplaceable natural features of the landscape, such as Tulare Lake, but always maintains a sense of respect for the people who were drawn to, learned to love, and nonetheless struggled to change that dauntingly varied landscape. This is a moving tribute to the land and the people who sought to tame the land and who sometimes succeeded by changing a part of our world that, if not exactly Edenic,was full of rare wonders.