George B. Handley is a professor of humanities and comparative literature at Brigham Young University. He is the author of two books of literary criticism: Postslavery Literatures of the Americas and New World Poetics: Nature and the Adamic Imagination of Whitman, Neruda, and Walcott.
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Description
List of Maps Prologue Summer Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Autumn Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Interlude Winter Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Spring Chapter 10 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Notes Bibliography Acknowledgments
"BYU professor of humanities and comparative literature George B. Handley offers an invigorating draft of mountain waters for nature and gospel lovers.... You'll enjoy this masterful book, which is destined to become a classic in Latter-day Saints studies."--BYU Magazine "Wallace Stegner wrote: 'No place, not even a wild place, is a place until it has had that human attention that at its highest reach we call poetry.' In this fortunate pairing of place and poet, we learn about Utah's Provo River--a paradox of wildness and extinction, pioneering and restoration. We learn that the river is embedded in community--Mormon community--a fact inseparable from the place. And we learn about the poet who attends to this river, a man who turns out to be an insightful scholar, an exuberant fly fisherman, a devout pilgrim, and an expansive guide as these home waters descend from the High Uintas through defining stories of family and identity, to pour down the Jordan River to the Great Salt Lake."--Stephen Trimble, author of Bargaining for Eden: The Fight for the Last Open Spaces in America "With his poetic writing, Home Waters...is an enjoyable read and is a must-have for any spectator of nature."--Utah Historical Quarterly "What a pleasing book. George Handley has calmly scripted a place-based masterwork. Home Waters engages knotty questions of conservation through the familiar pattern of a year on the land....and offers a useful lens for readers of contemporary ecocriticism." --Western American Literature

