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Water and What We Know: Following the Roots of a Northern Life

par Karen Babine

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2016 Minnesota Book Award Winner for Memoir & Creative Nonfiction Consider your place, the place where you feel the most at home: a tree-lined lake, a bean field planted on stolen land, a rig drilling the golden prairie, city streets alive with energy. Written in the language of the northern landscape of experience, Karen Babine explores the meaning of being in your place on a particular day.In essays that travel from the wildness of Lake Superior to the order of an apple orchard, Babine traces an ethic of place, a way to understand the essence of inhabiting a place deeply rooted in personal stories. She takes us from moments of reflection, through the pages of her Minnesota family's history, to the drama of the land and the shaping of the earth. From the Mississippi's Headwaters in Itasca State Park--its name from veritas caput, or "true head"d--she explores the desire that drives the idea of the North. The bite of a Honeycrisp apple grown in Ohio returns her to her origin in Minnesota and to pie-making lessons in her Gram's kitchen. In the Deadwood, South Dakota, of her great-great-grandfather, briefly police chief; in the translation of her ancestors from Swedish to Minnesotan; on the outer edge of the New Madrid Fault in Nebraska; through the flatlands along I-90; at the foot of Mount St. Helens: Babine pursues what the Irish call dinnseanchas, place-lore. How, she asks, does land determine what kind of people grow in that soil? And through it all runs water, carrying a birch bark canoe with a bullet hole and a bloodstain, roaring over the Edmund Fitzgerald, flooding the Red River Valley, carving the glaciated land along with historical memory.As she searches out the stories that water has written upon human consciousness, Babine reveals again and again what their poignancy tells us about our place and what it means to be here.… (plus d'informations)
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Water and What We Know: Following the Roots of a Northern Life by Karen Babine is a collection of essays that look at life, water, geology, and community in an unique perspective. Babine earned her BA from Concordia College, her MFA from Eastern Washington University, and her PhD from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. She is currently an assistant professor of English at Concordia College.

Babine begins her collection of essays from her grandparents cabin in the Minnesota wilderness looking out the window at a summer scene with a mug of tea reflecting on where she is and the nature around her. The cabin is too far out to get cable internet and in order to get dish internet it would mean cutting down a tree, and that is too high a cost. Her focus drifts in the book, but the drifting is with purpose and everything comes full circle. There are several levels to the author’s thinking. She loves nature. She protects saplings and ponders on why people build summerhouses to get away from everything, but bring everything with them… and then complain about supporting the community they are now part of. It is like people who camp out in the wilderness and coexist with nature and others come in Winnebagos and call it camping. Babine’s connection goes deeper than the stereotypical “tree hugger.” She understands geology, hydrology, and can read the history of the land. The ripples in the farmland and giant boulders in open fields. There are stories to be told about how they got there and why they are there.

North is more than a cardinal direction for Babine. It is an attitude and a life for those who dare. She quotes Nietzsche, more than once on “true climate” the exact geographical location that corresponds to the climate of the thinker. The culture of the north as experienced a person with roots and a family history Northern Minnesota. The north can be harsh with air temperatures dropping to sixty below zero. The harshness creates tight-knit communities that even though you could tell a farmers religion from the color of his tractor, people all pulled together when needed. She compares the landscape and people to other places she has been. She tries but cannot adopt to the prairie. The people there also lack that northern community feeling. She discovers the power of nature in Eastern Washington. Forces and quantities that are almost too great to imagine. She compares the 1980 Mount St. Helen’s eruption and the devastation it left to other much larger eruptions across the world.

Babine also includes some history of her family. There is a humorous and for many typical story of the relationship with her grandmother over the best type of apples, the proper way of making a pie, “That’s not how I taught you to do that.”, to being saved by having a good apple peeler. Babine has a special connection with the natural world around her and it’s community. Her writing displays a mingling of Thoreau’s views on nature and the folksiness of Paul Harvey. A delightful book to read.
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  evil_cyclist | Mar 16, 2020 |
I picked this book up because the author is a friend of a friend. I didn't know much about it - just that my friend Carolyn told me I'd enjoy it. She was right.

The author explores the effects that place can have on a person's development - the way the land, the water, the home that we return to impacts the way we see the world. As a concept, I would have found this interesting, and her writing compelling, enough to keep me engaged until the end.

But, then there's the kicker - this place of the author's is also MY place. The small Minnesota towns she writes about are the towns of my ancestors - the towns we returned to every summer, and still return to as a family, each year, even though our ancestors are no longer with us. Reading her thoughts about these SPECIFIC places made this book heart-stirring for me in ways that I didn't expect.

Standout essays for me include Roald Amundsen's Teeth, which talks about the idea of The North as a choice, a place people seek out as an escape; The River - 1997, about the flood of the Red River Valley; Grain Elevator Skyline, which had my favorite sentence of the whole book - "The homeplace is where you go to be reminded of what you know."; I-90, about road trips, and soundtracks, and the highways that become part of your heart.

I expect I will read this book many times, sometimes in its entirety, but more often in pieces. It feels comforting and embracing - for me, it feels like home. ( )
  NeedMoreShelves | Nov 13, 2016 |
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2016 Minnesota Book Award Winner for Memoir & Creative Nonfiction Consider your place, the place where you feel the most at home: a tree-lined lake, a bean field planted on stolen land, a rig drilling the golden prairie, city streets alive with energy. Written in the language of the northern landscape of experience, Karen Babine explores the meaning of being in your place on a particular day.In essays that travel from the wildness of Lake Superior to the order of an apple orchard, Babine traces an ethic of place, a way to understand the essence of inhabiting a place deeply rooted in personal stories. She takes us from moments of reflection, through the pages of her Minnesota family's history, to the drama of the land and the shaping of the earth. From the Mississippi's Headwaters in Itasca State Park--its name from veritas caput, or "true head"d--she explores the desire that drives the idea of the North. The bite of a Honeycrisp apple grown in Ohio returns her to her origin in Minnesota and to pie-making lessons in her Gram's kitchen. In the Deadwood, South Dakota, of her great-great-grandfather, briefly police chief; in the translation of her ancestors from Swedish to Minnesotan; on the outer edge of the New Madrid Fault in Nebraska; through the flatlands along I-90; at the foot of Mount St. Helens: Babine pursues what the Irish call dinnseanchas, place-lore. How, she asks, does land determine what kind of people grow in that soil? And through it all runs water, carrying a birch bark canoe with a bullet hole and a bloodstain, roaring over the Edmund Fitzgerald, flooding the Red River Valley, carving the glaciated land along with historical memory.As she searches out the stories that water has written upon human consciousness, Babine reveals again and again what their poignancy tells us about our place and what it means to be here.

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