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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jim HoyPublisher: University Press of Kansas Imprint: University Press of Kansas Dimensions: Width: 16.00cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 23.30cm Weight: 0.608kg ISBN: 9780700629930ISBN 10: 0700629939 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 30 September 2020 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 ContentsReviews[Hoy's] descriptions of ranch life in the tallgrass prairie, past and present, are a major cultural contribution to the literature of place.--Roundup Magazine Jim Hoy knows the Flint Hills as well, if not better, than anyone who has written on the subject, and My Flint Hills is Hoy's 'love song' to the region. The stories in this book are reflections of life lived in the region and of the deep family ties he has to the hills. There are works on the Flint Hills but none with a passionate and informed voice like Hoy's. It is a joy to read Hoy's deep-rooted affection for the place he calls home.--James Sherow, author of The Chisholm Trail: Joseph McCoy's Great Gamble Grass isn't the only thing that grows beautifully in the Kansas Flint Hills. So do families, horses, tall tales, myths, unwelcome cedar trees, the number of stars you can see in the sky, and women who make legendary pies. Even when some folks are remembered only in fragments of amusing yarns, their names have a place in the deep and horizontal root system Jim Hoy cultivates. It's as if he anticipated the rest of us, stopping on I-35 between Emporia and Cassoday to admire the view from the scenic overlook at the Bazaar Cattle Pens, and wondering what's really happening out there in those hills. He did us the favor of writing it all down.--C. J. Janovy, arts reporter and editor, KCUR (Public Radio Kansas City, MO) and author of No Place Like Home: Lessons in Activism from LGBT Kansas Hoy's gift as a writer is his attention to detail and the patience with which he chronicles life in a part of the world that is largely undocumented, even within the world of Western literature.--Western American Literature[Hoy's] descriptions of ranch life in the tallgrass prairie, past and present, are a major cultural contribution to the literature of place.--Roundup Magazine Jim Hoy knows the Flint Hills as well, if not better, than anyone who has written on the subject, and My Flint Hills is Hoy's 'love song' to the region. The stories in this book are reflections of life lived in the region and of the deep family ties he has to the hills. There are works on the Flint Hills but none with a passionate and informed voice like Hoy's. It is a joy to read Hoy's deep-rooted affection for the place he calls home.--James Sherow, author of The Chisholm Trail: Joseph McCoy's Great Gamble Grass isn't the only thing that grows beautifully in the Kansas Flint Hills. So do families, horses, tall tales, myths, unwelcome cedar trees, the number of stars you can see in the sky, and women who make legendary pies. Even when some folks are remembered only in fragments of amusing yarns, their names have a place in the deep and horizontal root system Jim Hoy cultivates. It's as if he anticipated the rest of us, stopping on I-35 between Emporia and Cassoday to admire the view from the scenic overlook at the Bazaar Cattle Pens, and wondering what's really happening out there in those hills. He did us the favor of writing it all down.--C. J. Janovy, arts reporter and editor, KCUR (Public Radio Kansas City, MO) and author of No Place Like Home: Lessons in Activism from LGBT Kansas Jim Hoy knows the Flint Hills as well, if not better, than anyone who has written on the subject, and My Flint Hills is Hoy's 'love song' to the region. The stories in this book are reflections of life lived in the region and of the deep family ties he has to the hills. There are works on the Flint Hills but none with a passionate and informed voice like Hoy's. It is a joy to read Hoy's deep-rooted affection for the place he calls home. - James Sherow, author of The Chisholm Trail: Joseph McCoy's Great Gamble Grass isn't the only thing that grows beautifully in the Kansas Flint Hills. So do families, horses, tall tales, myths, unwelcome cedar trees, the number of stars you can see in the sky, and women who make legendary pies. Even when some folks are remembered only in fragments of amusing yarns, their names have a place in the deep and horizontal root system Jim Hoy cultivates. It's as if he anticipated the rest of us, stopping on I-35 between Emporia and Cassoday to admire the view from the scenic overlook at the Bazaar Cattle Pens, and wondering what's really happening out there in those hills. He did us the favor of writing it all down. - C. J. Janovy, arts reporter and editor, KCUR (Public Radio Kansas City, MO) and author of No Place Like Home: Lessons in Activism from LGBT Kansas “Jim Hoy knows the Flint Hills as well, if not better, than anyone who has written on the subject, and My Flint Hills is Hoy’s love song to the region. The stories in this book are reflections of life lived in the region and of the deep family ties he has to the hills. There are works on the Flint Hills but none with a passionate and informed voice like Hoy’s. It is a joy to read Hoy’s deep-rooted affection for the place he calls home.”- James Sherow, author of The Chisholm Trail: Joseph McCoy’s Great Gamble; “Grass isn’t the only thing that grows beautifully in the Kansas Flint Hills. So do families, horses, tall tales, myths, unwelcome cedar trees, the number of stars you can see in the sky, and women who make legendary pies. Even when some folks are remembered only in fragments of amusing yarns, their names have a place in the deep and horizontal root system Jim Hoy cultivates. It’s as if he anticipated the rest of us, stopping on I-35 between Emporia and Cassoday to admire the view from the scenic overlook at the Bazaar Cattle Pens, and wondering what’s really happening out there in those hills. He did us the favor of writing it all down.”- C. J. Janovy, arts reporter and editor, KCUR (Public Radio Kansas City, MO) and author of No Place Like Home: Lessons in Activism from LGBT Kansas Jim Hoy knows the Flint Hills as well, if not better, than anyone who has written on the subject, and My Flint Hills is Hoy's 'love song' to the region. The stories in this book are reflections of life lived in the region and of the deep family ties he has to the hills. There are works on the Flint Hills but none with a passionate and informed voice like Hoy's. It is a joy to read Hoy's deep-rooted affection for the place he calls home.--James Sherow, author of The Chisholm Trail: Joseph McCoy's Great Gamble Grass isn't the only thing that grows beautifully in the Kansas Flint Hills. So do families, horses, tall tales, myths, unwelcome cedar trees, the number of stars you can see in the sky, and women who make legendary pies. Even when some folks are remembered only in fragments of amusing yarns, their names have a place in the deep and horizontal root system Jim Hoy cultivates. It's as if he anticipated the rest of us, stopping on I-35 between Emporia and Cassoday to admire the view from the scenic overlook at the Bazaar Cattle Pens, and wondering what's really happening out there in those hills. He did us the favor of writing it all down.--C. J. Janovy, arts reporter and editor, KCUR (Public Radio Kansas City, MO) and author of No Place Like Home: Lessons in Activism from LGBT Kansas Author InformationJim Hoy is professor emeritus of English, Emporia State University, and director emeritus of the Center for Great Plains Studies. Among his many books are Flint Hills Cowboys: Tales from the Tallgrass Prairie, also from Kansas, and, with Tom Isern, Plains Folk: A Commonplace of the Great Plains. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |