Reviews
A captivating 'biography of a landscape,' its good humor blended with impressive scholarship, including snappy thumbnail histories of canoes, horses, dogs, barbed wire and those pesky blood-sucking mosquitoes.
Rediscovering the Great Plains afforded me the gift—in truth, the endgame of all reading—of transporting me from my own time and place into another.
Engrossing... compelling and enjoyable. Henderson has a flair for travel writing. At his best, he displays the erudition and wit of Jonathan Raban... Like Raban, Henderson is good at tying together history with his own adventures and keeps a steady pace of lively description before the reader. Rediscovering the Great Plains offers much that is new to even the most knowledgeable, well-traveled and well-read prairie dweller.
This book is a unigue and deeply personal homage to the ideal of the Great Plains area of North America... [It] is to be savoured, with beautifully written prose, a sprinkling of humour, and much food for thought.
You will have to search far and wide to find a prairie guide with more knowledge, humour, and humility than Norman Henderson... [His] writing style throughout is direct, vigorous, and rich with metaphors... He deftly interweaves wry moments with the dog, the horse, the canoe, and a skunk in a fridge with his scholarly reflections on other grassland cultures... This is a fine book made even finer by its beautiful maps and by the ink drawings of Robert Cook.
On the surface, this is a record of personal discovery, an attempt to recapture the ancient, or in the case of the horse, historic, methods of plains travel and through these to rediscover the prairies themselves. But Norman Henderson's experiences, which take place in one small corner of the Great Plains—along the eastern half of Saskatchewan's Qu'Appelle Valley—are made universal by his familiarity with the history and the literature of the world's other great grasslands and his ability to use these windows on other places and earlier times to capture at least part of the essence of prairie life.
A passionate narrative.
Rediscovering the Great Plains reveals Henderson's desire to connect more closely with the land and his obvious affection for the prairie. The scholarship is excellent and the writing is a delight.
There is much to be learned from Henderson's explorations of the pleasures and burdens of traditional modes of travel, his encounters with nature and people of the past, and his meditations on how a person comes to know a place.
Book Details
Contents:
Preface
Chapter One: Night Vision - Of the Moonlit Plains by Train
Chapter Two: Dog - Of the Dogs of the Old Plains and of Building a Travois
Chapter Three: "Mush!" - Of Plains Journeys through
Contents:
Preface
Chapter One: Night Vision - Of the Moonlit Plains by Train
Chapter Two: Dog - Of the Dogs of the Old Plains and of Building a Travois
Chapter Three: "Mush!" - Of Plains Journeys through Heat, Snow, and Mosquitoes with a Remarkable Husky
Chapter Four: Canoe - Of the Extraordinary River Voyages of Plains Navigators
Chapter Five: "En Avant!" - Of Coyotes, Cattle, and Wire, and of the Many Wonders of the Prairie River
Chapter Six: Horse - Of the "Great Gift" of the Spanish and of What-Might-Have-Been
Chapter Seven: "Gee up!" - Of a Final Journey in the Great Valley and of Adventures with a Philosophical Horse
Chapter Eight: Day Flight - Of Home and the View from Above
Acknowledgments
Biographic Notes
Chapter Notes
References
Index