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The Place You Love Is Gone: Progress Hits Home
 
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The Place You Love Is Gone: Progress Hits Home [Hardcover]

Melissa Holbrook Pierson (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 16, 2006

"Smart and defiant. Rich with characters and anecdote and heart. A great success."--Anthony Swofford, New York Times Book Review

Has the future---ever more people with their houses, stores, roads, and sprawl; been wrecking your past? Melissa Holbrook Pierson, with unalloyed insight, elucidates how it feels to lose that landscape of home. In the past twenty years, like countless towns it resembles, Akron, Ohio, has lost its singularity, and much of what native-daughter Pierson loves about it. She then moves to Hoboken, New Jersey, a forgotten appendage of New York; until stockbrokers discover it. Finally, she speaks of rural areas, telling of the thousands of upstate New Yorkers displaced by city reservoirs. A unique book uniquely of our moment. This is what it feels like to lose the place you love.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

A delightful and exemplary exploration by a singularly alert author. -- Phillip Lopate

An expansive, intelligent, gorgeously written meditation on memory and loss. -- Adrienne Miller, author of The Coast of Akron

Anyone who cares about the sense of place will identify with her definition of home in this wonderful, personal book. -- Dolores Hayden, author of A Field Guide to Sprawl

As usual, her writing is both lovely and incisive. -- Christine Stansell, author of American Moderns

Moving, beautifully-constructed, and sure to connect with countless hearts broken over the loss of places they loved. -- James Howard Kunstler, author of The Long Emergency

About the Author

Melissa Holbrook Pierson is the author of The Perfect Vehicle, The Place You Love Is Gone, Dark Horses and Black Beauties, and The Man Who Would Stop at Nothing. She lives in Shokan, New York.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 224 pages
  • Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company (January 16, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0393057399
  • ISBN-13: 978-0393057393
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.6 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,402,184 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Melissa Holbrook Pierson should have known she was destined to become a writer ever since she was a kid hiding in the branches of the maple tree, writing action-filled stories of escape and ignoring her mother's cries to come down out of there. She largely resisted the knowledge until after college, when she realized she was unlikely to become a professor of literature, an avant-garde film director, or an art critic. Her first "book" was a ghost-writing assignment about fashion and packing light for travel, although she had never done such a thing in her life.

When she discovered motorcycling in her mid-twenties, though, she realized she had a calling: writing about human passion. Her first book, in 1997, was The Perfect Vehicle: What It Is About Motorcycles. The next, about women and horses, was Dark Horses and Black Beauties. This was followed by The Place You Love Is Gone: Progress Hits Home, her lament of rapacious overdevelopment.

And now, this coming October, she returns to the territory of her first book with The Man Who Would Stop at Nothing: Long-Distance Motorcycling's Endless Road, an exploration of obsessive riding by way of one of the most extreme practitioners of it, world-record-holder John Ryan. All her books have been published by the esteemed independent publisher W. W. Norton.

 

Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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4 star:
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Provokes the Mind, January 22, 2007
By 
S. Brown "s_brown" (Potsdam, NY United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
If you have ever raged against the greed of "development" or experienced the sadness of seeing the fencerow you explored as a child plowed under by "progress," The Place You Love Is Gone is a warm and welcome act of understanding and comprehension. Holbrook weaves a tale of reminicence with a subtle but effective exposition of a movement that is destroying not only the places we know and that are part of us; but a "development" movement that is destroying our self.

Holbrook's writing style interjects (sometimes startling) facts with an overall story about life in three communities--Akron, Hoboken, and the Catskills of New York. The book has an almost poetic feel and does drag at times. However, overall, the style is effective. One cannot put down this book and not think of his or her first home--and tellingly, that home is probably gone forever for most of us.

This is a book that needed to be written and Holbrook did a magnificent job of effectively communicating the effects of the "development" industry without the normal soap box stands. An excellent work and likely to become a classic.
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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars ... and not just the place *you* love, either, January 30, 2006
By 
Dogs and Books (Brooklyn, NY United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Place You Love Is Gone: Progress Hits Home (Hardcover)
Everyone I mention this book to gets the same stricken look of recognition and loss on their face. For Pierson's Akron, I substitute a half-acre of scrubby woods across the street from the house I grew up in, a half-acre that, like her Akron, has been torn up in favor of a McMansion with the obligatory SUV parked in front.

If not a suburban half-acre, then a working-class neighborhood with its street life and its shops -- or, opening the lens very wide now, entire upstate NY towns drowned for the sake of New York City's reservoir system. (No wonder they hate us!) The thing about Pierson's book is, it doesn't stop at being a mournfully witty, acidulous elegy for one lost place but takes in what you have to call the big picture -- the population growth, the accelerated pace of development, the hectic rush to Mall-Wart and Home De(s)pot and McMansions and wide roads and and and ... -- in which, p.s., most of us, as she doesn't let us get away without acknowledging, are complicit. (I do love visiting a certain Marshall's in a certain formerly charming upstate town, myself.)

For my money, "The Place You Love Is Gone" belongs on the shelf next to Jane Jacobs's "The Death and Life of Great American Cities" and Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring" -- because the writing is just so damn wonderful and angry (and, in Pierson's case, funny too) and because this is one of those books that rings the alarm loud and clear. Most of use have been standing around looking at the latest deceitfully named subdivision ("Spreading Oaks"), shaking our heads and muttering "Wha' happen?" Melissa Pierson will tell you.


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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An homage to places we love, May 7, 2007
By 
CS Pond (New England) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Place You Love Is Gone: Progress Hits Home (Hardcover)
Perhaps it is because I am originally from Akron, Ohio, one of the places where fellow native Pierson lovingly writes about with clarity and sorrow. Or perhaps it is just because I love well-written books about landscapes and places. Regardless, this book is still resonating with me several months after reading it. Pierson weaves in her own memoir of the places she has known and lived in her life with their history and quotes from other authors. Along the way she makes the point that we take our landscapes and special buildings for granted until it is too late and they have been replaced by strip malls and a more homogenous American background.

For anyone who has ridden their bikes around their childhood neighborhoods or have known each house, each bush and tree, or corner store or the threads of roads and hills which form our memories of place, this book will have great meaning. You will be taken to your home place, wherever that may be, and you will see our vanishing American landscape with greater appreciation. Pierson's lucid, introspective prose is a pleasure to read.
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