Writer Profile

Books & Essays

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    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

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    Title:
    Chattooga: Descending into the Myth of Deliverance River

    Date Published:
    University of Georgia Press 2004

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    Title:
    Elemental South: An Anthology of Southern Nature Writing

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

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    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

    Description:
    John Lane has scaled a granite dome in the Suriname rain forest and waded past cottonmouths in the heart of a Florida cypress swamp. He has shadowed crocodiles in a Yucat?n mangrove thicket and paddled the rapids of North Carolina's Tuckaseegee River in search of a drowned kayaker. Waist Deep in Black Water offers a collection of Lane's own writings that range from wilderness exploration, to conservation issues, to explorations of family history in Spartanburg, South Carolina. Lane's trek to the Medicine Wheel National Historic Landmark in Wyoming becomes an occasion to draw connections between religion, sexuality, and mountain lore. A hike into Kentucky's Red River Gorge prompts a meditation on the words and spirit of Wendell Berry, who helped prevent the gorge from being dammed. Some of Lane's writings are set closer to home, where the South Carolina hills meet the Blue Ridge. In "Something Rare as a Dwarf-Flowered Heartleaf," Lane recounts his campaign to stop the development of a woodland area within Spartanburg's city limits. Family issues also surface, as in "Confluence: Pacolet River." Here Lane kayaks through country where his family has lived for generations as he reckons the distances between himself and his farming, millworking forebears. Something is always at stake wherever Lane takes us: a stand of old-growth trees, a primate population, a friendship, a soul. Lane bestows loving attention on the places and people he visits in this collection and, in the process, goes beyond the traditional concerns of nature and travel writing.

    John Lane has been published in American Whitewater, Southern Review, Terra Nova, and Fourth Genre. In addition, he has been anthologized in The Heart of a Nation and A Year in Place. His books include 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 writes with equal measures of wit, wisdom, passion, and humor about natural places that matter to him-a medicine wheel in the Big Horns, a cypress swamp in Florida, a rain forest in Suriname, a barrier island off the coast of Georgia, not to mention the priceless woods and rivers near his home in South Carolina. Like all good nature writers, Lane explores himself as he explores the landscapes that inspire him, and this book is a wonderful account, written with clarity and depth, of his travels within and without. John Lane takes the land seriously. His essays matter." Christopher Camuto, author of Another Country: Journeying Toward the Cherokee Mountains

    Book Review #2:
    "Any life worth living is full of friction, contradiction, and errancy. John Lane has led a life worth living. He accepts its difficulties and open-endedness with remarkable equanimity. He does not dramatize, advertise, or accuse himself. His narratives are always excursions, which may be into the exotic outback of Suriname, up a local mountain road, or down a suburban creek. They produce knowledge that is never final, momentary illumination of what cannot be systematically elucidated. The stories have real drama and real grief, yet a musing and bemused detachment is their dominant tone. That, and a serenely implacable resistance to the psychological and ecological atrocities that are committed in the name of what is sold to us as the American Way of Life." Franklin Burroughs, author of The River Home

    Book Review #3:
    "Let this author take you away from the cacophony of the modern world to the wild places-eons-old settings that remain unchanged. . . . John Lane's collection of eighteen outdoor essays features exquisite descriptions that recall the beauty and mystery of the earth as it must have been in raw and unfettered times. . . . For those seeking escape from the crush of contemporary times, this book leads to sanctuary." Eric Chaney, Southern Living

    Book Review #4:
    "Intriguing and well-wrought essays from a southern boy who is a collector of stories, each like a pretty rock gathered from some high place. Lane's pockets are full. His informants are wind and sage, storms and dark water, a love of land, the strange muteness of history. This is a book of searching, traveling through the uncharted territory where the human psyche meets wildness, to glean what lies in the depths of life. Lane's adventures carry us down many unknown and beautiful roads; like the best of journeys, they bring us back to ourselves."
    ?Janisse Ray, author of Ecology of a Cracker Childhood


    Book Review #5:

    "Lane has a fluid eye in a 'world where time moves in more than one direction and no landscape holds steady for long,' and it's energizing to see through that eye, open as it is to both light and darkness."
    ?Kirkus Reviews




  • 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

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    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