Writer Profile

Books & Essays

  • Book Cover

    Title:
    Bartram's Living Legacy: The Travels and the Nature of the South

    Date Published:
    Mercer University Press 2010

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    Title:
    Circling Home

    Date Published:
    University of Georgia Press 2007

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    Title:
    As the World Around Us Sleeps

    Date Published:
    Briarpatch Press 1992. Reissued by Holocene Publications 2006

  • Book Cover

    Title:
    Chattooga: Descending into the Myth of Deliverance River

    Date Published:
    University of Georgia Press 2004

    Description:
    Before the novel and the film Deliverance appeared in the early 1970s, any outsiders one met along the Chattooga River were likely serious canoeists or anglers. In later years, untold numbers and kinds of people have felt the draw of the river's torrents, which pour down the Appalachians along the Georgia-South Carolina border. Because of Deliverance the Chattooga looms enigmatically in our shared imagination, as iconic as Twain's Mississippi--or maybe Conrad's Congo.

    This is John Lane's search for the real Chattooga--for the truths that reside somewhere in the river's rapids, along its shores, or in its travelers' hearts. Lane balances the dark, indifferent mythical river of Deliverance against the Chattooga known to locals and to the outdoors enthusiasts who first mastered its treacherous vortices and hydraulics. Starting at its headwaters, Lane leads us down the river and through its complex history to its current status as a National Wild and Scenic River. Along the way he stops for talks with conservation activists, seventh-generation residents, locals who played parts in the movie, day visitors, and others. Lane weaves into each encounter an abundance of details drawn from his perceptive readings and viewings of Deliverance and his wide-ranging knowledge of the Chattooga watershed. At the end of his run, Lane leaves us still fully possessed by the Chattooga's mystery, yet better informed about its place in his world and ours.

    John Lane's writing has been published in American Whitewater, Southern Review, Terra Nova, and Fourth Genre. His books include Waist Deep in Black Water (Georgia), several volumes of poetry, and Weed Time, a gathering of his essays. Lane is an associate professor of English at Wofford College in Spartanburg, South Carolina.

    Book Review #1:
    "John Lane has brought us a haunting review, thirty years later, of how Deliverance, the book and film, have affected the river corridor, its surroundings, and the people who live near its banks, and those who come to ride its keen white edges. . . . John Lane treats the landscapes of the Chattooga River as places that exist not only in the mathematics of hydraulics and geomorphology but also in the aqua incognita of our imaginations. His writing is charged, alive, a little threatening, as he guides us down unexplored waters. His accounts of the people, the politics, the rapids, and the changing environments of the Chattooga flicker insistently like a flashbulb afterimage in the mind long after the book is tucked away. If any author has come close to cracking the code to the enigma of why folks are drawn to the black-rocked dangers and the white magic of fast, free-flowing water, it is John Lane." Richard Bangs, author of The Lost River and founder of Sobek Expeditions

    Book Review #2:
    "Having previously explored the river, Lane returns to journey the entire length of it, describing its natural beauty and danger as well as pausing to view it through the prism of Dickey's book. . . . Lane artfully applies his poetic sensibility to the river itself . . . Lane's own writing and observations are good enough to stand outside of Dickey's considerable shadow." Publishers Weekly

    Book Review #3:
    "Chattooga: Descending into the Myth of Deliverance River is a highly original blending of landscape description, environmental history, and memoir. John Lane evokes the impact upon a remote, beautiful region and its people that was caused by James Dickey's best-selling novel and the movie based on it. By including himself in the audience for such myth-making, and by integrating accounts of his own kayaking down the Chattooga, Lane creates a stirring tale of adventure as well as a reflection about the impact of mass media on a rural community. The precision and humor of his writing, as well as the many deft characterizations along the way, make his book engrossing from the first page to the last." John Elder, author of Reading the Mountains of Home

    Book Review #4:

    "Lane?s book is a personal narrative that skillfully navigates the contemporary cultural and ecological history of its subject. . . . A writer who would obviously rather paddle first and theorize later, Lane prefers to let the river speak for itself."
    ?Atlanta Journal-Constitution




  • Book Cover

    Title:
    Elemental South: An Anthology of Southern Nature Writing

    Date Published:
    (edited volume) University of Georgia Press 2004

  • Book Cover

    Title:
    Noble Trees of the South Carolina Upstate

    Date Published:
    Hub City Writers Project 2003

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    Title:
    Waist Deep in Black Water

    Date Published:
    University of Georgia Press 2002

  • Title:
    The Once-Again Wilderness: Following Wendell Berry into Kentucky

    Date Published:
    (edited volume) Holocene Publications 2000

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    Title:
    The Woods Stretched for Miles: New Nature Writing from the South

    Date Published:
    (edited volume) University of Georgia Press 1999

  • Book Cover

    Title:
    Hub City Anthology : Spartanburg Writers & Artists

    Date Published:
    (edited volume) Holocene Publications 1996

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    Title:
    Weed Time: essays from the edge of a country yard

    Date Published:
    Briarpatch Press 1993. Reissued by Holocene Publications 1995

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    Title:
    My Paddle to the Sea: Eleven Days on the River of the Carolinas

    Date Published:
    University of Georgia Press 2011