1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910457486703321

Autore

Rogers Susan Fox

Titolo

My reach [[electronic resource] ] : a Hudson River memoir / / Susan Fox Rogers

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Ithaca, : Cornell University Press, 2011

ISBN

0-8014-6310-6

0-8014-6309-2

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (237 p.)

Disciplina

974.7/3

Soggetti

Rivers - New York (State) - Travel

Rivers - New Jersey - Travel

Electronic books.

Hudson River (N.Y. and N.J.) Description and travel

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references.

Nota di contenuto

Frontmatter -- Contents -- A Note to the Reader -- 1. What Lingers -- 2. My Reach -- 3. Swimming the Hudson -- 4. Courage -- 5. Home -- 6. A Life in a Boat -- 7. The Lost Dunes of Childhood -- 8. The Speed of Wind and Water -- 9. I'm Glad You Are Here -- 10. The Long Loneliness -- 11. Solace -- 12. Learning the River -- 13. If You Are Lucky -- 14. Fishing -- 15. Circling the City -- 16. Nubian Goats -- 17. Sturgeon Moon -- 18. Sitting by the River -- 19. Golden Club -- 20. Grave Sites -- 21. Summer Solstice -- 22. Love for a River -- Books Consulted -- Acknowledgments

Sommario/riassunto

In this memoir of the Hudson River and of her family, Susan Fox Rogers writes from a fresh perspective: the seat of her kayak. Low in the water, she explores the bays and the larger estuary, riding the tides, marveling over sturgeons and eels, eagles and herons, and spotting the remains of the ice and cement industries. After years of dipping her paddle into the waters off the village of Tivoli, she came to know the rocks and tree limbs, currents and eddies, mansions and islands so well that she claimed that section of the river as her own: her reach. Woven into Rogers's intimate exploration of the river is the story of her life as a woman in the outdoors-rock climbing and hiking as well as kayaking.



Rogers writes of the Hudson River with skill and vivacity. Her strong sense of place informs her engagement with a waterway that lured the early Dutch settlers, entranced nineteenth-century painters, and has been marked by decades of pollution. The river and the communities along its banks become partners in Rogers's life and vivid characters in her memoir. Her travels on the river range from short excursions to the Saugerties Lighthouse to a days-long journey from Tivoli to Tarrytown and a circumnavigation of Manhattan Island, while in memory she ventures as far as the Indiana Dunes and the French Pyrenees.In a fluid, engaging voice, My Reach mixes the genres of memoir, outdoor adventure, natural and unnatural history. Rogers's interest in the flora and fauna of the river is as keen as her insight into the people who live and travel along the waterway. She integrates moments of description and environmental context with her own process of grieving the recent deaths of both parents. The result is a book that not only moves the reader but also informs and entertains.