Synopses & Reviews
In the 1990s, rural America increased in population three times faster than it did in the 1980s, as people left cities searching for a slower pace, new opportunities, and better schools. Battle Rock is the examination of one such rural community tucked into McElmo Canyon in the remote southwest corner of Colorado. From 1999-2000, Bill Celis lived in the community and attended Battle Rock school, which sits in the middle of the canyon, providing both a real and figurative divider between the longtime farmers and ranchers from the newer urban expatriates. As Celis warmly describes the daily lives of the canyon residents, the children, and their teacher, he carefully paints the portrait of a community under pressure resulting from conflicting viewpoints, goals and values. Along the way, he encounters bull snakes and loaded revolvers, Anasazi ruins and majestic vistas, poverty, stubbornness, ghosts, a cattle drive, and the daily struggles on the playground and in school board meetings. In Battle Rock, Celis puts to rest the common misperception that smaller communities offer simpler lives.
Review
"...the book is difficult to put down. Celis is a charismatic listener, and what he hears, makes for an adventure." Denver Post
Review
"It's [the] mix of vivid storytelling and reportage that makes Battle Rock a compelling read." Durango Herald
Review
"...throws into sharp relief a tension point for any public school system...the clash between parental control and broader societal standards." Washington Post Magazine
Review
"Celis...has woven narrative and fact into a beautiful book....Battle Rock is definitely worth buying, reading and passing around." Cortez Journal
About the Author
William Celis is an assistant professor at USC's Annenberg School for Communication. He was a national education correspondent for The New York Times and a reporter and columnist for The Wall Street Journal. He lives in Los Angeles, California.