A Voice Crying in the Wilderness edition by Edward Abbey Politics Social Sciences eBooks
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Finished two weeks before his death, and published posthumously, A Voice Crying in the Wilderness is a collection of aphorisms and common-sense wisdom filled with sarcastic, witty, and inspirational thoughts on the things Edward Abbey loved most, especially nature and freedom.
Abbey chose each passage himself from his own journals as well as from his previous writings. In his own words, some of the notes “may be unconscious plagiarisms from the great and dead (never steal from the living and mediocre).”
In Abbey’s own style—sometimes curmudgeonly, sometimes sarcastic, and often witty—he talks about nearly everything including politics, writing, sex, and sports. But as an uncompromising environmentalist, Abbey shines when talking about nature and the environment.
Abbey’s last wish was to be buried in an unmarked grave somewhere out in the vast desert he loved so much. A Voice Crying in the Wilderness is an enduring signal from that desert, through the words of one of the singular American thinkers of our times.
About the Author
Edward Abbey was born in Home, Pennsylvania in 1927. In 1944, at the age of 17, Abbey set out to explore the American Southwest, bumming around the country by hitchhiking and hopping freight trains. It was during this time that Abbey developed a love of the desert, which would shape his life and his art for the next forty years. After a brief stint in the military, Abbey completed his education at the University of New Mexico and later, at the University of Edinburgh. He took employment as a park ranger and fire lookout at several different National Parks throughout his life, experiences from which he drew for his many books. Abbey died at his home in Oracle, Arizona in 1989.
A Voice Crying in the Wilderness edition by Edward Abbey Politics Social Sciences eBooks
Edward Abbey has been a favorite author of mine since I started reading his books in 1986. When he died, his death was exactly how he'd predicted it would be. He died under anesthesia during surgery. Those of us who loved his cry in the wilderness to take better care of at least our state and national parks were devastated by the loss. "The Monkeywrench Gang" was a testament to what he dreamed of doing to protect our state and national parks. It is also a terrific book. I have read every novel he's written and love them all. I even used to own quite a few autographed copies of his books that I had purchased in Moab, Utah. Nearly all of the wilderness areas of Utah, the Grand Canyon and his hated area of Lake Powell, which he referred to as Lake Foul, were the areas he wrote the most about. He wrote about real life experiences he had in all these areas. He wrote about nearly dying from a flash flood in a canyon area. He wrote about his having been a Park Ranger in Utah's Arches National Park in "Desert Solitaire " which is probably his highest in numbers of books sold and the most popular of his books. He wrote about his falling in love and living with a woman in a wilderness area, her disappearing and his frantic search for her, and his grief over not finding her and other books that I used to have of his.Product details
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A Voice Crying in the Wilderness edition by Edward Abbey Politics Social Sciences eBooks Reviews
Wonderful little book of insights, thoughts, and quotations by Edward Abbey. Small enough to be in reach whenever you need to fill up your head with some commonsense. It is full of Abbeys' biting observations on life, love, his love of the desert, and his country.
This addition makes my Abbey collection complete! A book of Abbey quotes, some published elsewhere, but now in one small volume. This was published for True Abbey Fans only.
I do not agree with some of his statements, but have been inspired for half of my life by his overall irrascible philosophy.
Bought for a friend of my son. A Sociology major. Will see results ... I hope.
Its not the art of the deal.
Here is a lovely little book full of the wit and wisdom of Edward Abbey. His viewpoints on Politics, Sex, Wilderness, etc. will be familiar if you've already read any of his works, but it's really neat to have a "carry around" volume of the sayings catagorised like this. You can pick this up anytime and read a couple thoughts or read straight through on one subject. Almost each one will provoke discussion. He seems to have such a way of going to the heart of an issue and delivering in a few short words a whole mindful of wisdom. Love it!
I fundamentally disagree with Edward Abbey on many of the core beliefs that inform his worldview. Nonetheless, I can't help but admire the man. A writer of immense wit and talent, Abbey's "Notes from a Secret Journal" is a collection of aphorisms, words of wisdom, and plain old thoughts that he compiled near the very end of his 62 years.
These sayings are categorized in subjects such as "On Nature", "Science and Technology", and "Government and Politics". The aphorisms run the gamut from borderline genius to incessantly meaningless. Still, it can't be denied that there is a strong intuitive strain that runs through Abbey's work here. The sheer simplicity of his intuition was the source of Abbey's occaisional brilliance. The man was not pretentious. He didn't put on airs, was crass at times, and spit in the direction of the Ivory Tower intellectuals. Yet, Abbey was highly intellectual himself and left Yale on his own accord due to disgust with Ivy League stuffiness. He was a self described redneck and an intellect for the common man. His love for the simple truths of reality are expressed in his distaste for overly conceptualized modes of thought. He expresses this on page 3
"I hate intellectual discussion. When I hear the words phenomenology or structuralism, I reach for my buck knife."
Such was the style of Ed Abbey. He, as a thinking man, serves to remind us all that too often intellectuals and philosophers, instead of seeking a greater understanding of reality, seek to play mental gymnastics that end up running in the opposite direction. Abbey brings thinking back down to Earth, back down to humanity. That said, the man could take this view too far and end up superficial as his distate for metaphysics shows.
In conclusion, I highly recommend this book and all of Edward Abbey's books. "A Voice Crying in the Wilderness" is both aggravating and charming, but always engaging. Ed's was a voice that is desperately need in today's world of aristocratic intellectual snobbery and superficial fixation with credentialism. Abbey shows how the common man is often a fount of radical wisdom.
Edward Abbey has been a favorite author of mine since I started reading his books in 1986. When he died, his death was exactly how he'd predicted it would be. He died under anesthesia during surgery. Those of us who loved his cry in the wilderness to take better care of at least our state and national parks were devastated by the loss. "The Monkeywrench Gang" was a testament to what he dreamed of doing to protect our state and national parks. It is also a terrific book. I have read every novel he's written and love them all. I even used to own quite a few autographed copies of his books that I had purchased in Moab, Utah. Nearly all of the wilderness areas of Utah, the Grand Canyon and his hated area of Lake Powell, which he referred to as Lake Foul, were the areas he wrote the most about. He wrote about real life experiences he had in all these areas. He wrote about nearly dying from a flash flood in a canyon area. He wrote about his having been a Park Ranger in Utah's Arches National Park in "Desert Solitaire " which is probably his highest in numbers of books sold and the most popular of his books. He wrote about his falling in love and living with a woman in a wilderness area, her disappearing and his frantic search for her, and his grief over not finding her and other books that I used to have of his.
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