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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Max McCoyPublisher: University Press of Kansas Imprint: University Press of Kansas Dimensions: Width: 16.00cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 23.30cm Weight: 0.625kg ISBN: 9780700626021ISBN 10: 0700626026 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 28 February 2018 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsAuthor's Note Mile Zero A Certain Crit Finding the Line Your River Voice The Flume Inherent Risk The Highest Valley Thirteen Prisons The Place of Memory Buy and Dry Color Ghosts of Sand Creek The ABCs of Internment Child of Calamity The November Plot The Waterscrape The Gun Show River of Quivira Bread and Quicksilver Trespasses Swells from Ancient Oceans Coyote's Song AcknowledgmentsReviewsMax McCoy's Elevations is a sensitive, in-depth view of a river and its human and natural history. McCoy's prose is as fluid and absorbing as the river itself. The Arkansas' currents and rivulets embroider human history since before white settlement bent the river toward mining, irrigation, and drinking and waste water. The river's banks, however, are where most of our interaction with the river stops and the wildness begins. Touching and moving, Elevations shows the author's personal connection with the Arkansas and why the river matters to us as Americans. --Patrick Dobson, author of Canoeing the Great Plains: A Missouri River Summer and Seldom Seen: A Journey into the Great Plains McCoy floats through a valley haunted by gold--not only in mines along the continental divide, but in corporate wheat farms that bleed the Ogallala aquifer and in the fantasies of Coronado--a valley where marijuana is legal but canoeing public waters is not, where the same values that desecrated the river also desecrated its people at Sand Creek and Ludlow, at a Japanese American internment camp, and at immigrant communities in southwest Kansas. In his meticulous search for the story of the Arkansas, McCoy unearths a deeper story of his own personal battles and of America at the dawn of Trump. --George Frazier, author of The Last Wild Places of Kansas Elevations is a Blue Highways kind of book about a swipe of America from Colorado to Oklahoma, down the fabled Arkansas River that in its lower length now flows salt and sand. A riverine biography, it hits all the notes--from past massacres like Ludlow to barely missed modern ones in Garden City, from declining groundwater to ascendant marijuana. The stories are perceptive picks, but best of all is the author's voice: unsurprised and unflinchingly honest. --Dan Flores, author of the award-winning books Coyote America and American Serengeti Max McCoy's Elevations is a sensitive, in-depth view of a river and its human and natural history. McCoy's prose is as fluid and absorbing as the river itself. The Arkansas' currents and rivulets embroider human history since before white settlement bent the river toward mining, irrigation, and drinking and waste water. The river's banks, however, are where most of our interaction with the river stops and the wildness begins. Touching and moving, Elevations shows the author's personal connection with the Arkansas and why the river matters to us as Americans. --Patrick Dobson, author of Canoeing the Great Plains: A Missouri River Summer and Seldom Seen: A Journey into the Great Plains McCoy floats through a valley haunted by gold--not only in mines along the continental divide, but in corporate wheat farms that bleed the Ogallala aquifer and in the fantasies of Coronado--a valley where marijuana is legal but canoeing public waters is not, where the same values that desecrated the river also desecrated its people at Sand Creek and Ludlow, at a Japanese American internment camp, and at immigrant communities in southwest Kansas. In his meticulous search for the story of the Arkansas, McCoy unearths a deeper story of his own personal battles and of America at the dawn of Trump. --George Frazer, author of The Last Wild Places of Kansas Elevations is a Blue Highways kind of book about a swipe of America from Colorado to Oklahoma, down the fabled Arkansas River that in its lower length now flows salt and sand. A riverine biography, it hits all the notes--from past massacres like Ludlow to barely missed modern ones in Garden City, from declining groundwater to ascendant marijuana. The stories are perceptive picks, but best of all is the author's voice: unsurprised and unflinchingly honest. --Dan Flores, author of the award-winning books Coyote America and American Serengeti Author InformationMax McCoy is professor of journalism and director of the Center for Great Plains Studies at Emporia State University. He has written a mystery series and works of historical fiction, three of which have won Spur Awards from the Western Writers of America. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |