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[QPD]⇒ Read Ecology of a Cracker Childhood The World as Home (Audible Audio Edition) Janisse Ray ListenUp Audiobooks Books

Ecology of a Cracker Childhood The World as Home (Audible Audio Edition) Janisse Ray ListenUp Audiobooks Books



Download As PDF : Ecology of a Cracker Childhood The World as Home (Audible Audio Edition) Janisse Ray ListenUp Audiobooks Books

Download PDF  Ecology of a Cracker Childhood The World as Home (Audible Audio Edition) Janisse Ray ListenUp Audiobooks Books

Janisse Ray grew up in a junkyard along US Highway 1, hidden from Florida-bound vacationers by the hedge at the edge of the road and by hulks of old cars and stacks of blown-out tires. Ecology of a Cracker Childhood tells how a childhood spent in rural isolation and steeped in religious fundamentalism grew into a passion to save the almost vanished longleaf pine ecosystem that once covered the South. In language at once colloquial, elegiac, and informative, Ray redeems two Souths.


Ecology of a Cracker Childhood The World as Home (Audible Audio Edition) Janisse Ray ListenUp Audiobooks Books

I came of age at a time and place when being ecologically aware meant you flattened your tin cans before tossing them in the trash. Fortunately, our planet is home to Janisse Ray and others who share her passion for nature and living sparingly. Ms. Ray, the author of Ecology of a Cracker Childhood, combines hilarity with heartache, alternating between musings on the abundant natural resources that surrounded her childhood home in Appling County, Georgia, and memories of her impoverished upbringing.

Ms. Ray writes about Christian fundamentalism very matter-of-factly; neither condemning or endorsing the religion that permeated every aspect of her growing up years. She talks about her family lineage and inter-generational poverty in a style that is reminiscent of Rick Bragg, a fellow southern author.

Deprived children must be resourceful and creative. Ms. Ray and her siblings “took trips” in abandoned cars that populated her father’s junkyard. “Sometimes in warm weather and even in cold, to escape the house and the endless work, we would go sit in the junk cars with the windows rolled down, and we would pretend to travel to far-off places.”

In time, Ms. Ray will leave home, journeying northward to college. She will meet an older student, a kindred spirit – “we loved the same things – poetry and the woods. Aloud across a campfire we read Walt Whitman, and when we described the lives we wanted, our desires were the same: to live simply, close to nature, to grow and collect our own food, to use plants as medicines, to be as self-sufficient as possible.”

As I write this on a splendid early summer morning, a grey squirrel is clambering down a tall Douglas fir tree, heading for the side of the house in search of sunflower seeds and peanuts that may have rolled off the deck railing above. I have seen dozens of other squirrels make that same precarious journey down that same tree but today there is an extra measure of appreciation for our mutual existence.

Product details

  • Audible Audiobook
  • Listening Length 7 hours and 40 minutes
  • Program Type Audiobook
  • Version Unabridged
  • Publisher ListenUp Audiobooks
  • Audible.com Release Date October 12, 2015
  • Whispersync for Voice Ready
  • Language English
  • ASIN B016E8TQNI

Read  Ecology of a Cracker Childhood The World as Home (Audible Audio Edition) Janisse Ray ListenUp Audiobooks Books

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Ecology of a Cracker Childhood The World as Home (Audible Audio Edition) Janisse Ray ListenUp Audiobooks Books Reviews


As a newcomer to South Georgia, I appreciated the cultural and ecological introduction to the region. Ray captures the beauty of local flora and fauna, and gives passionate expression to its devastation.
"Write about what you know," is an old axiom for would-be authors. Janisse Ray takes this to heart in "Ecology of a Cracker Childhood." Part autobiography and childhood memoir and part an ecology of plants and animals, this is a wonderful tale that successfully blends both.

Janisse Ray is writing about what she knows best. The human dimension to her tale is a tale of growing up with her family in the natural world. The family home sits in the middle of a junkyard along old Route 1 in southeastern Georgia in a forest of longleaf pine. It is a coming of age story, where she is clearly destined for a horizon beyond the junkyard in the pines.

She is solidly grounded in her childhood environment, low on the affluence scale, but one which has prepared her well for life. "Ecology of a Cracker Childhood" conveys a great sense of place and will give the reader a newfound respect for a forest of longleaf pine.

I bought this book at the Visitor Center at the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, not all that far from Baxley, Georgia. I am glad they stocked it in the store. Reading this put me on to "Pinhook," her next work which I also recommend.
I really enjoyed the author's creativity as she applied different writing techniques in different chapters.

She paints a picture of the old south and adeptly reminds us why we need to preserve the environment.

She vacillates between nostalgia and facts - her story and the story of the land.

Loved it!
Finished reading this amazing book last night - could not put it down as it is so beautifully written - one of the better memoirs I've read in awhile as it combines the author's childhood in Georgia with the ecology of the area (southeast Georgia). Having learned so much about the region, I've purchased the sequel -- Ms. Ray is an exceptional writer!
Janise Ray is an excellent writer and this book is about so much more than you would ever think - nature, animals, mental health, and a great junk yard.
This is an enjoyable book in a narrative style that combines a lot of the ecology of the longleaf pine forests with a bit of sustainable philosophy in the chapter headings. Many will recognize life growing up in the 1970s. I lived in the area during the j1970's when the author was growing up so perhaps it is especially relevant. I do recommend it for anyone living in Georgia, Alabama, northern Florida, and Mississippi as long-leaf pine region. It also counters some stereotypes of "poor, white trash" as the family was clearly intelligent, hard-working, and her mother kept an immaculate house.
The only disappointment in this book was the fact that the author stopped the story too soon.
Having also grown up in south Georgia, I know she did an excellent job of portraying the area and the people. Her informative chapters about Georgia trees was interesting as well as educational. I just wanted to know more about her as an adult. Maybe she'll write a follow-up.
I came of age at a time and place when being ecologically aware meant you flattened your tin cans before tossing them in the trash. Fortunately, our planet is home to Janisse Ray and others who share her passion for nature and living sparingly. Ms. Ray, the author of Ecology of a Cracker Childhood, combines hilarity with heartache, alternating between musings on the abundant natural resources that surrounded her childhood home in Appling County, Georgia, and memories of her impoverished upbringing.

Ms. Ray writes about Christian fundamentalism very matter-of-factly; neither condemning or endorsing the religion that permeated every aspect of her growing up years. She talks about her family lineage and inter-generational poverty in a style that is reminiscent of Rick Bragg, a fellow southern author.

Deprived children must be resourceful and creative. Ms. Ray and her siblings “took trips” in abandoned cars that populated her father’s junkyard. “Sometimes in warm weather and even in cold, to escape the house and the endless work, we would go sit in the junk cars with the windows rolled down, and we would pretend to travel to far-off places.”

In time, Ms. Ray will leave home, journeying northward to college. She will meet an older student, a kindred spirit – “we loved the same things – poetry and the woods. Aloud across a campfire we read Walt Whitman, and when we described the lives we wanted, our desires were the same to live simply, close to nature, to grow and collect our own food, to use plants as medicines, to be as self-sufficient as possible.”

As I write this on a splendid early summer morning, a grey squirrel is clambering down a tall Douglas fir tree, heading for the side of the house in search of sunflower seeds and peanuts that may have rolled off the deck railing above. I have seen dozens of other squirrels make that same precarious journey down that same tree but today there is an extra measure of appreciation for our mutual existence.
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