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Jerusalem Creek: Journeys into Driftless Country » (Abridged, 4 CDs, 4 hours 30 min)

Book cover image of Jerusalem Creek: Journeys into Driftless Country by Ted Leeson

Authors: Ted Leeson, Lloyd James
ISBN-13: 9781932378733, ISBN-10: 1932378731
Format: Compact Disc
Publisher: American Media International
Date Published: July 2005
Edition: Abridged, 4 CDs, 4 hours 30 min

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Author Biography: Ted Leeson


Ted Leeson is the author of the widely acclaimed The Habit of Rivers. His essays and articles have appeared in Fly Fisherman, Field & Stream, The Utne Reader, Gray's Sporting Journal, Men's Journal, and regularly in Fly Rod & Reel. He teaches English at Oregon State University in Corvallis.

Book Synopsis


An exploration into the unique landscape of the "driftless area" of Wisconsin, some ten thousand square miles of beautiful trout country.

Publishers Weekly

"It is a truism among anglers that the deepest affections attach to first waters. They become our private archetypes.... The images of people, the reflections of other times and places are mirrored in a silver surface, and fishing becomes a form of memory, and memory a form of return." Angling essayist and Oregon State University English professor Leeson's new collection of essays (after Habit of Rivers) returns to the waters he's known since childhood, the spring creeks in southern Wisconsin's pastoral "driftless country." The landscape is an Ice Age geologic anomaly, untouched by glaciers and composed of narrow valleys, coves, hollows and small creeks full of trout. Leeson's finely woven recollections and thoughtful meditations on the natural world drive these essays, as he considers everything from bees to Amish farms to the special qualities of trout fishermen. He recalls becoming a fishing fanatic at the age of 14, describes his favorite fishing companions (his brother and their old childhood friend, nicknamed "Lizard") and tells of a medieval custom called "beating the bounds," in which older villagers taught young boys the limits of their rural hamlet by banging their heads against trees and other boundary markers. Occasionally Leeson's reveries drift into vague sentimentality, but for the most part he keeps them grounded with anecdotes and facts about the natural history and geography of his native region. (July) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsix
Introduction: Small Thrills1
1Springs Eternal15
2Driftless35
3Meandering51
4Objects in Mirror Are Closer Than They Appear77
5The Land of Milk and Honey102
6Brothers in Arms128
7Certain Specific Days148
8The Heart of the Heartland156
9Some Assembly Required166
10Beating the Bounds178
11Green Thoughts in a Green Shade193
12Simple Gifts209
13The Same River Twice222
Afterword: A Workable Deception235

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