Up North, the outdoor
world in January verges on monochromatic. Bright yellow, green, and red colors
appear only on signs (and, in the city, traffic lights), while in fields and woods the
soft dun color of a dry, rustling beech leaf is almost shocking against the
white of snow and black tracery of bare branches. The picture at left was taken before there was snow on the ground, so use your imagination to subtract that much brown, and see what remains.
(You can also click here for images of
dun-colored horses and information on what causes the coloring and its
variations.)
Several recent new offerings
at Dog Ears Books sport covers with subtle palette colors:
NEW
COLLECTED POEMS, by Wendell Berry (hardcover with jacket, $30)
THE
RIVER SWIMMER (two novellas), by Jim Harrison (hardcover with jacket, $25)
THE
GEOARCHAEOLOGY OF LAKE MICHIGAN COASTAL DUNES, by William A. Lovis Alan F.
Arbogast, & G. William Monaghan (softcover, large format, $35.95)
Now
in paperback: THE WINDWARD SHORE: A WINTER ON THE GREAT LAKES, by Jerry Dennis
(pb, $16.95)
Friday was my sister's birthday. What did I send her? Recall that I am a
bookseller and that we are a family of readers! Can I be more specific? Not
without spoiling the surprise, in case the package hasn’t reached her yet. Were
the cover colors bright or subtle? Definitely subtle. Will she find the book
boring? Not on your life! It will transport her to a place she'd like to be....
2 comments:
Nice calming post! I actually like the subtle colors of winter. I'm sure your sister will LOVE her b-day gift!
My sister says the package arrived on Thursday, and she's looking forward to reading her new book. I looked into THE GEOARCHAEOLOGY OF LAKE MICHIGAN COASTAL DUNES today and thought of Gerry Sell. There is Torch Lake, and there north (on succeeding pages) are the sections of coastline my sister and I were taken to explore with Gerry as our guide.
A calm post is nice once in a while, isn't it? I can't rant every day, after all. :)
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