Review
"Coming To Treeline is enchanting. Such feeling! It's an honor to have a painting from our collection grace the cover." --
Mimi Kilgore, Curator, Fayez Sarofim Collection"Coming To Treeline startles with the depth and clarity of an Adirondack lake." --
Richard Henry, editor, Blueline Literary Journal."Cranston does what the best poets do best: (she) connects with readers on a level of emotional depth and truth." --
Victor Forbes, Editor of FINE ART MAGAZINE, FALL 2005"Pamela Cranston has captured [these mountains] with grace and invested them with another skin of meaning and of beauty." --
Bill McKibben, environmentalist and author of Wandering Home: A Long Walk Through America's Most Hopeful Region, Vermont's Champlain Valley and New York's Adirondacks."This book is a hymn to a place sung in language that flows out of close observation, reverence and love." --
Chase Twichell, author of The Practice of Poetry: Writing Exercises from Poets Who Teach, The Ghost of Eden: Poems, and The Snow Watcher: Poems."Written with craft and a mature sensitivity to language, Cranston's poetry sings with peace, hope, and wisdom..." --
Colleen Marie Ryor, editor, The Adirondack Review.Cranston's Adirondacks is a world made particular. This poetry finds in these ancient mountains an ancient solace: holy-ground, renewal, redemption. --
Stephanie Coyne-DeGhett, Poetry Editor, BluelineCranston's passion for the outdoors shines through with an attention to detail that brings the reader's every sense alive. --
Brittany Bombard, Features Editor, Lake Placid NewsI'll keep "Coming To Treeline" on my desk to read it over and over. Poetry like this is poetry forever. --
Elfie E. Larken, Oakland, CALike Herbert or Traherne, Cranston opens new doors, inviting us to grasp revelation everywhere, particularly in our interactions with nature. --
The Rev. Dr. L. William Countryman, author of The Poetic Imagination: An Anglican Spiritual Tradition and Run, Shepherds, Run.