At the Field's End: Interviews with 22 Pacific Northwest Writers, Revised and Expanded

$25.00
by Nicholas O’Connell

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At the Field's End is an exploration and celebration of Pacific Northwest literature. In their own words, twenty-two of the finest and best-known writers in America discuss their work and the region's influence on it. Interviews with Denise Levertov and John Haines have been added since the publication of the first edition in 1987, and the author introductions have been updated. Nicholas O'Connell's interviews are of that most delectable variety: so casual they could be taking place at the adjoining coffeehouse table, and yet so engaging that it'd be a shame if the espresso machine kicked in at an inopportune moment and obscured one's ability to eavesdrop. At the Field's End was originally published in 1987; this edition adds a new preface, updated biographical information, and interviews with Denise Levertov and John Haines. O'Connell is interested in regional identity, and "stories," he says, "represent one of the strongest elements of regional identity." While each of these interviews covers very different literary territory--how couldn't they, with the likes of Raymond Carver, Ivan Doig, Charles Johnson, Ursula K. Le Guin, Levertov, and Tom Robbins as their subjects?--it is amazing how much a place can govern its writers and its literature. For many of the writers O'Connell speaks with, landscape is no mere backdrop, in life or work. "It wants me here," says Tess Gallagher of the place she calls home; "I have to obey." "Landscape," says James Welch, "is almost the main character in anything I write." It is the rain that appeals to Robbins, as "It allows for prolonged periods of intimacy.... It keeps you inside where you can turn inward." Gary Snyder feels an affinity more for a particular spot than for the region or its weather. "Every person," he says, "should be the product of a specific place, like a coho salmon or a rhododendron bush." --Jane Steinberg "At the Field's End is a treasure of a book for anyone who likes to read, wants to write, or enjoys personal glimpses of people whose novels, poems, and short stories are familiar fare to the reading public." -- Billings Gazette At the Field's End is an exploration and celebration of Pacific Northwest literature. In their own words, twenty-two of the finest and best-known writers in America discuss their work and the region's influence on it. Interviews with Denise Levertov and John Haines have been added since the publication of the first edition in 1987, and the author introductions have been updated. Nicholas O'Connell is a writer and scholar based in Seattle. His five books include On Sacred Ground: The Spirit of Place in Pacific Northwest Literature (University of Washington Press, 2003), At the Field's End: Interviews with 22 Pacific Northwest Writers (University of Washington Press, 1998), and Contemporary Ecofiction (Charles Scribner's, 1996). Paperback - light grey with design of hills. 9x10 inches, 380 pages

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