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Paddling The Tennessee River: A Voyage On Easy Water (Outdoor Tennessee)
 
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Paddling The Tennessee River: A Voyage On Easy Water (Outdoor Tennessee) [Paperback]

Kim Trevathan (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 31, 2001 Outdoor Tennessee
In late August 1998, Kim Trevathan and his dog, Jasper, set out by canoe on a long, slow trip down the 652 miles of the Tennessee River, the largest tributary of the Ohio. Trevathan wanted to experience the river in its entirety, from Knoxville’s narrow, winding channel, which flows past rocky bluffs, to the wide-open waters of Kentucky Lake at its lower end.

Over the course of the five-week voyage, Trevathan rediscovered the people and places that made history on the Tennessee’s banks. He crossed the path of the explorer Meriwether Lewis along the Natchez Trace, noted the sites of Ulysses S. Grant’s Civil War battles, and passed Hiwassee Island, the spot where a teenaged runaway named Sam Houston lived with Cherokee Chief Jolly.

Trevathan also came to know the modern river’s dwellers, including a towboat pilot, two couples who traded in their landlocked homes for life on the river, a campground owner, and a meteorologist for NASA. He placed his life in the hands of U.S. Army Corps of Engineers lock operators while navigating the river’s nine dams.

Paddling the Tennessee River is a powerful travel narrative that captures the river’s wild, turbulent, and defiant past and confronts what it has become--an overused and overdeveloped series of lakes. But first and foremost, the book is the story of a man and his dog, riding low enough to smell the water and to discover the promise of a slow river running through the southern heartland.

--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with Coldhearted River: A Canoe Odyssey Down the Cumberland (Outdoor Tennessee) $24.95

Paddling The Tennessee River: A Voyage On Easy Water (Outdoor Tennessee) + Coldhearted River: A Canoe Odyssey Down the Cumberland (Outdoor Tennessee)

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Editorial Reviews

From the Author

Most experienced canoeists shake their heads in puzzlement when I tell them I canoed the length of the Tennessee. With nine dams, little or no current, and heavy barge, jet ski, and cabin cruiser traffic, it is not the ideal river for canoeists. I conceived of the trip, from the outset, as a writing project about the Tennessee, and the canoe enabled me to write about the river from a perspective different from most other people. I was low to the water, close enough to touch it and smell it, and I was under my own power, which made it imperative that I constantly consult the navigational charts in detail to find shortcuts and mile markers. The biggest dangers to me on the Tennessee were not from the dams, the barges, snakes, or from "Deliverance" style villains out to get me. My dog Jasper and I were most often threatened by those unaware of our existence or of their effect upon us: cabin cruiser captains whose boats created four to five-foot high wakes. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

About the Author

Kim Trevathan resides in Rockford, Tennessee, and teaches English at Maryville College. He received his master’s in fine arts in creative writing from the University of Alabama. Trevathan’s fiction has appeared in New Millennium Writings, the Texas Review, New Delta Review, and as the title story in the anthology Walking on Water and Other Stories. He has published essays in Under the Sun and Distillery. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Univ Tennessee Press; 1 edition (October 31, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1572331445
  • ISBN-13: 978-1572331440
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 5.9 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,756,622 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I live in Maryville, Tennessee and teach creative writing, journalism, and literature at Maryville College. My second book, "Coldhearted River: A Canoe Odyssey Down the Cumberland," was published by the University of Tennessee Press in May 2006. It tells the story of my 700-mile trip from Harlan, Kentucky, through Nashville, to the Ohio River in Western Kentucky. Photographer Randy Russell accompanied me in the bow of the canoe and received much criticism from the stern concerning his paddling technique and his off-key singing of 'today's country' songs. His photographs, however, were excellent. My first book, "Paddling the Tennessee River: A Voyage on Easy Water," was published by UT Press in 2001. It recounts another ill-advised canoe trip, this one down a 652-mile river whose current had been stilled by TVA's nine dams, resulting in canoe-unfriendly lakes turbulent with the wakes of cabin cruisers, jet skis, and supercharged bass boats. I took along my unsuspecting but loyal dog, Jasper, for company and protection.
My wife, Julie, is a veterinarian. We were both born and raised in Murray, Kentucky, where the sale of alcohol was recently legalized.
I have published fiction in New Millennium Writings (winner of the Spring 1999 contest), the Texas Review, New Delta Review, the Distillery, and the anthology, "Walking on Water and Other Stories." I have published essays in The Distillery, The Florida Review, the KWG anothology "Migrants and Stowaways," Nine: A Journal of Baseball History and Culture, and Under the Sun.
I spent much of my youth traveling from university to university to see the country and avoid getting a real job. I have a masters degree in English from the University of Illinois; a masters in journalism from the University of Wyoming; and an MFA in creative writing from the University of Alabama.
When I'm not writing or teaching, I like to canoe, hike, play tennis, and nap.

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Brief Review of Paddling the Tennessee River, January 1, 2002
By 
Trevathan's account of his canoe trip with his dog Jasper on the Tennessee River is an easy paddling sort of read. Like the trip itself, it's musing, meandering, a little slow in some places, but rapid and tense in others. The book is at its best with sidebars about the river's place in history - more specifically TVA history, descriptions of the Trail of Tears motorcycle ride in Florence, Alabama and conversations with real life characters who manage to make the Tennessee River their livelihood.

Trevathan wrestles with the divergent interests that often conflict with each other. On one hand the TVA dams prevent widespread flooding and destruction of homes, but it also strips the river of its natural beauty. He rails against the large cabin cruisers that create wakes that toss his tiny boat, but then makes friends with a married couple who offer him cold beer and a tour of their luxury houseboat. The book is a reflection of the river --- a flotsam of history, travel, and an indictment of the insanity called "progress." Trevathan has successfully completed two voyages: one was canoeing the Tennessee, the other was writing about it.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding!, September 30, 2008
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My wife and I do quite a bit of paddling. I was interested in learning about the Tennessee River when I first moved to Tennessee. I got much more than I bargained for with this book. Not only does the author narrate the journey, it was also the most painless introduction to a local region and its history that I have ever read. The author can come off as a bit of a tree hugger at times, but take it with a grain of salt. He did an outstanding job with this book and his writing style made it a very enjoyable read. I would recommend this to anyone.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great Read, January 30, 2002
By 
"stephencorey" (Tullahoma, TN USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Paddling The Tennessee River: A Voyage On Easy Water (Outdoor Tennessee) (Paperback)
Kim Trevathan's Paddling the Tennessee River: A Voyage on Easy Water is that rare bit of travel writing that manages to be informative, entertaining, and well written. As Trevathan makes his way down the essentially tamed Tennessee River looking for clues to its former wildness and beauty, he goes beyond a mere recording of visual observations and ends up with a story that reads more like a good novel than anything else. In the course of this book, which covers his five week journey down river, he touches on the history of the river and the region, modern eco-politics, the anti-septic world of corporate America (from which Trevathan is on brief hiatus), the prevailing southern stereotypes (will he or will he not be required to squeal like a pig at some juncture of his journey) and the still-surviving beauty of the great Outdoors. In short, this is an ambitious book, a commendation in itself. That Trevathan manages to chew what he has bitten off with humor, insight, and intelligence is a testament to his many talents.
Oh, and you'll love the dog.
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