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More copies of this ISBNThis title in other editionseBook editionsIrons in the Fireby John Mcphee
Synopses & ReviewsPublisher Comments:This acclaimed collection of essays begins with the title essay and a trip to Nevada, where, in the company of a brand inspector, John McPhee discovers that cattle rustling is not just history. Book News Annotation:A collection of seven pieces by the prolific author (he's published
24 books)--on real life people and places. Here he explores cattle
rustling in Nevada, forensic geology, an auction of exotic cars, a
virgin forest in central New Jersey, a blind writer-professor working
at his computer, and scrap tires in California. No index or
bibliography.
Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com) Synopsis:The title piece of this collection resulted from a casual conversation in which a friend of John McPhee's told him that he had recently been in Nevada and had seen at a remote crossroads a white vehicle with whirling red-and-blue roof lights and the Nevada state seal on the door. Above the seal, where he expected to see the words State Police, he saw the words Brand Inspector. This suggested to him that cattle rustling was not just history in Nevada. He told McPhee that he had thought of him, and what a reporter might learn if he spent a few weeks in that vehicle. The conversation took place in New Jersey. Virtually the same day, the author departed for Nevada. The differing contents of this book reflect the variety in the overall span of McPhee's work - compositions that have in common only and essentially the fact that they are about real people in real places. The longest piece, called "The Gravel Page", is about forensic geology - insights from the science as they are used to help solve major crimes and puzzles on an even greater scale. The shortest piece - "Rinard at Manheim" - is an experimental story about an auction of exotic cars, in which the interviewee, Rinard, takes over the narrative while McPhee's remarks are confined to brackets. Items as unlikely as a virgin forest in central New Jersey, a blind writer-professor working at his computer, and a mountain of scrap tires (forty-four million scrap tires) in California shape the scenes and substance of other pieces. Not to mention Plymouth Rock. "Travels of the Rock", which ends the book, is about a day when the State of Massachusetts had to call in a mason to repair the nation's most hallowed lithic relic. McPhee stood in the pit with the mason in Plymouth and watched the attentive public leaning on the railings above. "Travels of the Rock" is a blend of colonial history, paleogeography, radiometric dating, societal drift, tectonic theory, schoolkids by the busload, and Mayflower descendants in leather jackets, cowboy boots, and one-way shades.
Synopsis:In this collection John McPhee once agains proves himself as a master observer of all arenas of life as well a powerful and important writer. About the AuthorJohn McPhee is the author of twenty-six books, including Annals of the Former World, for which he received the Pulitzer Prize in 1999. He has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 1965 and lives in Princeton, New Jersey. Table of ContentsIrons in the fire — Release — In virgin forest — The gravel page — Duty of care — Rinard at Manheim — Travels of the rock. What Our Readers Are SayingBe the first to add a comment for a chance to win!Product Details
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