Overview
It is an area that has captivated and inspired travelers,philosophers,and artists for centuries. Long celebrated as one of the most visually stunning regions of the American landscape,it is also one of the most historically significant. And now,this vast,25,000-square-mile expanse known as the Nebraska Sandhills is brought to life with passion,perspective,and ecological timeliness in an unforgettable collection by Stephen Jones.The Last Prairie is an extraordinary triumph of the essayist's art. By turns graceful and penetrating,introspective and universal,ruminative and prescient,the 20 essays in The Last Prairie embodies the essence of Sandhills life. Jones delivers a series of riveting accounts of the Sandhills,flora and fauna,wildlife,and rich cultural history. Fascinating descriptions of bald eagles,trumpeter swans,and the annual migratory flight of a half-million sandhill cranes stand alongside equally vivid accounts of trailblazing homesteaders,range wars,and devastating prairie fires. Jones speaks eloquently to such timeless themes as humanity's search for community and the ties that bind man and nature.
It is a region that has long captivated and inspired travelers,writers,and artists. Celebrated as one of the most visually stunning of American landscapes,it is the largest remaining relic of the majestic prairies that once extended from the Missouri River to the Rocky Mountains. Now this vast but fragile expanse known as the Nebraska Sandhills comes to life in an unforgettable collection of essays by naturalist and author Stephen R. Jones.
Evocative,insightful,and melancholy,the twenty essays in The Last Prairie limn the essence oflife in the Sandhills. Fascinating descriptions of dancing prairie-chickens,courting fireflies,and the annual migratory flight of a half-million sandhill cranes stand alongside equally vivid accounts of trailblazing homesteaders,range wars,and devastating storms. The Last Prairie is both paean and elegy for a place where you can walk for miles through shoulder-high grass or sit on a hill for hours with only the cry of the curlew and the hiss of the wind for company—a place Jones sought for decades and for whose survival he now fears.
The author's vast historical canvas lends a rare perspective and urgency to the book's discussion of recent efforts to save the Niobara River from dams and developers. And in depicting the life of the Plains Indians,including the nature of their cosmology and their doomed resistance to the encroachments of white settlers,Jones speaks eloquently to such timeless themes as humanity's search for community and the ties that bind us with nature. Infused with quiet pathos and vibrant imagery,The Last Prairie is a triumph of the essayist's art.
In graceful,pitch-perfect language,an award-winning environmentalist renders a startlingly vivid portrait of life in the Nebraska Sandhills.
Editorials
KLIATT
A tender, compelling contribution to ecology, Jones's immersion in the Nebraska prairie underscores the importance of natural beauty to human contentment. On the last expanse of untrammeled Midwestern grassland, Jones examines the interrelations of aquifers with prairie chickens and deerflies, of wild berries and nuts in the native American diet. Layered over biological and geological observations are comments on the Lakota myths of the Milky Way and the settler's battle against drought, hailstones, and pulmonary disease. Epigraphs at the beginnings of chapters tease the mind with Pawnee verse, the warnings of a Cheyenne chief, the autobiography of Luther Standing Bear, and the philosophy of Black Elk. KLIATT Codes: JSA—Recommended for junior and senior high school students, advanced students, and adults. 2000, Univ. of Nebraska Press, Bison, 242p. illus. bibliog., Ages 12 to adult.—Mary Ellen Snodgrass
Library Journal
Reading this book is as pleasant an experience as actually viewing the tall, gently waving prairie grasses and pastoral scenes that Jones (Colorado Nature Almanac, 1998) describes. Each of the 20 chapters here is devoted to a single topic or theme, such as Landmarks, Grass, Pine Lake, Tallgrass Desert, Dune Dancers, East Meets West, and Transition. All are described in fond and gentle detail, and even though there are no photos, the images are as clear as if there were. Often, the author recounts Native American legends, which he has garnered from visits and interviews and which are tied to the relevant theme, location, or local thought. An extensive bibliographic essay provides advice and sources for further reading. This book belongs in every Nebraska library, as well as in most public and academic environmental essay collections.--Nancy Moeckel, Miami Univ. Libs., Oxford, OH Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.\Western American Literature
“Jones does a remarkable job of capturing the variety, texture, and integrity of the Sandhills environment—including the plant and animal life as well as the ranching community and the historical fabric that work to create this complicated landscape. . . . An interesting contribution to the field of nature writing in several respects. First, it richly describes a region of the United States that few people might be familiar with. Second, it works to show how landscape, wildlife, culture, and history are always interconnected. In his introduction, Jones writes, ‘the grass around me, the limber pines, the clams and 80-million-year-old ocean that spawned them, and I were all made from the same stuff, our lives woven together by the same currents of time and place.’ Finally, the book works to make a compelling argument that because of human dependence upon and connection to landscape and all lie, regions like the Sandhills deserve consideration and preservation.”—Sarah Hulme Hill, Western American LiteratureJournal of the West
"[A] gem of Great Plains environmental writing. Stephen Jones has given us a collection of his undated journal entries that represent an interesting combination of nature writing, history, and anecdote. . . . The strength of this work for this reviewer is its acknowledgment and investigation of the intimacy indigenous peoples had with this environment. One finds the footprints of Mari Sandoz, Aldo Leopold, and John Neihardt in this must-read for Sandhills enthusiasts. As Jones's own 'love song to the plains,' The Last Prairie captures the region's rich history with a depth often overlooked in other writings on the Great Plains."— Douglas Harvey, Journal of the West