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

  • 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

  • Book Cover

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

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

  • Book Cover

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

    Date Published:
    University of Georgia Press 2011

    Description:
    Three months after a family vacation in Costa Rica ends in tragedy when two fellow rafters die on the flooded Rio Reventazón, John Lane sets out with friends from his own backyard in upcountry South Carolina to calm his nerves and to paddle to the sea.

    Like Huck Finn, Lane sees a river journey as a portal to change, but unlike Twain’s character, Lane isn’t escaping. He’s getting intimate with the river that flows right past his home in the Spartanburg suburbs. Lane’s three­hundred-mile float trip takes him down the Broad River and into Lake Marion before continuing down the Santee River. Along the way Lane recounts local history and spars with streamside literary presences such as Mind of the South author W. J. Cash; Henry Savage, author of the Rivers of America Series volume on the Santee; novelist and Pulitzer Prize–winner Julia Peterkin; early explorer John Lawson; and poet and outdoor writer Archibald Rutledge. Lane ponders the sites of old cotton mills; abandoned locks, canals, and bridges; ghost towns fallen into decay a century before; Indian mounds; American Revolutionary and Civil War battle sites; nuclear power plants; and boat landings. Along the way he encounters a cast of characters Twain himself would envy—perplexed fishermen, catfish clean­ers, river rats, and a trio of drug-addled drifters on a lonely boat dock a day’s paddle from the sea.

    By the time Lane and his companions finally approach the ocean about forty miles north of Charleston they have to fight the tide and set a furious pace. Through it all, paddle stroke by paddle stroke, Lane is reminded why life and rivers have always been wedded together.

    Book Review #1:
    "One needn't be a canoeist or even outdoorsy to appreciate the insights of modern-day river voyager John Lane as he chronicles his downriver journey from the Upstate to the Atlantic Ocean. . . . His overwhelming desire to 'rewild' South Carolina's disappearing natural places is presented less as environmental activism and more as a means to a somewhat idealistic end: ultimate preservation of our common heritage. Because for Lane, maintaining the integrity of our watershed is as much about holding on to the stories that have been born and died there, as it is about the river itself."
    —Heidi Coryell Williams, Town Magazine


    Book Review #2:
    "More than a mere travelogue, My Paddle to the Sea is a celebration of life, friendship, river travel, and the natural world. Like Lane's previous books of nonfiction, Deep in Black Water, Chattooga: Descending Into the Myth of Deliverance River, The Best of the Kudzu Telegraph and Circling Home, My Paddle to the Sea is written in crisp yet intimate prose that is both poetic and layered, while never losing sight of the author's urgent desire to communicate the depth of his love for the natural world."
    —Jeremy L.C. Jones, Spartanburg Herald-Journal




    Book Review #3:
    "I love John Lane's work. Before I picked up My Paddle to the Sea I was reading another book, a classic I am told, that was putting me to sleep. Then I turned to Lane's book and—zook—I was wide awake and floating down the river. Three qualities exist in his writing that are rarely compatible in an author: an intense readability, a deep thoughtfulness, and a largeness of spirit. 'Largeness is a lifelong matter,' said Wallace Stegner. John Lane has taken that to heart. Join him on this beautiful trip—full of contemplation and life-and-death, and humor and derring-do—and you will find yourself growing larger."—David Gessner, author of Return of the Osprey

    Book Review #4:
    "John Lane knows that traveling on a river is the best way to see the land, to remember our history, and to face ourselves. This fine writer’s journey down his own southern waterway is an adventure that can inform and inspire us all."—Tim Palmer, author of Rivers of America, Lifelines: The Case for River Conservation, and Youghiogheny: Appalachian River

    Book Review #5:
    "In graceful, richly detailed prose, John Lane captures the dynamics of a complex watershed, where droughts, dangers and historical narratives flow as seamlessly together as the tributaries of the Santee."—Catherine Reid, Warren Wilson College, author, Coyote: Seeking the Hunter in Our Midst

    Book Review #6:
    "Countless readers across the South, and well beyond, will profit from trekking right along with John Lane, who is a very gifted natural teacher and a great literary companion."—Bland Simpson, co-author with Scott Taylor, The Coasts of Carolina