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Wild Card Quilt: Taking a Chance on Home (The World As Home)
 
 
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Wild Card Quilt: Taking a Chance on Home (The World As Home) [Hardcover]

Janisse Ray (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

The World As Home April 2003
Seventeen years after leaving home "for good," self-sufficient single mother Janisse Ray leaves her comfortable life in Montana to revisit her cracker origins. Craving a life built on "land, history, and blood," she moves into the family's rundown 1920s farmhouse in Baxley, Georgia. There she rediscovers the nearly lost pleasures of country life - a Thanksgiving syrup boil, alligator trapping, and neighbors - as well as family skirmishes. Wild Card Quilt is the story of her return and the adventures that follow as she ponders whether she will stay in Baxley "and die where seven generations of grandmothers had died" before her.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Seventeen years after leaving her childhood home in southern Georgia, Ray (Ecology of a Cracker Childhood) moved back to raise her nine-year-old son. The author delivers a lively account of her return to "a place that as a young woman I had gladly left behind." A naturalist and activist, Ray writes eloquently about the region's forests and waterways, places she works to protect from annihilation. She's also a community advocate and embraces rural traditions. In episodic vignettes, Ray tells of attending a syrup boiling, judging a pork cook-off and struggling to keep her son's small school open. Neighbors, cousins and assorted eccentrics populate the narrative, and Ray's affectionate portraits of them are memorable: her uncle Percy, who mows grass and attends church "with great joy"; her brother and his efforts to grow a giant tomato; and the photographer who lives in an old school bus. The eponymous quilt appears throughout the book, serving as a metaphor for Ray's attempt to reassemble her life. "Making a quilt is about being able to talk," she writes. "[T]rying to create a beautiful thing... mother and daughter, in spite of our differences." Though she doesn't delve into her relationship with her son and barely addresses the issue of race and contact with local black people, Ray celebrates the richness of the natural world and the comforts of family.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Ray described her hardscrabble rural Georgia childhood and her journey out into a wider world in her acclaimed first book, Ecology of a Cracker Childhood (1999). But just as she had to leave home to become the writer and environmental activist she is, Ray had to return to put into practice her belief in the value of rural communities. In neatly fashioned and wonderfully anecdotal linked essays she chronicles her move into her grandmother's old farmhouse with her young son, and her attempt to create a meaningful life in a land where magnificent longleaf pine forests have been replaced with tree plantations, family farms sold, and small towns driven nearly to extinction. As she recounts her homesteading adventures and quilting sessions with her mother, and shares her love of nature with equal measures of lyricism and humor, Ray explains why she believes that rural life is just as important and worthy of protection as wilderness and wildlife. Not only is her book quiltlike, her entire endeavor is also a form of quilt making as she rescues discarded ways of life, seeks to create wholeness out of fragments, and concocts vibrant patterns of living that combine tradition and innovation and make way for beauty. Donna Seaman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Milkweed Editions; 1st edition (April 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1571312722
  • ISBN-13: 978-1571312723
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 5.8 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,115,623 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Janisse Ray grew up in a junkyard along U.S. Highway 1. She is the author of Wild Card Quilt and Ecology of a Cracker Childhood, which won the American Book Award, as well as the Southern Book Critics Circle Award, Southeastern Booksellers Association Award for Nonfiction, and the Southern Environmental Law Center Award.

A naturalist, environmental activist, and winner of the 1996 Merriam Frontier Award, she has also published her work in Wild Earth, Orion, Florida Naturalist, and Georgia Wildlife and has been a nature commentator for Georgia Public Radio. She moved this year to Vermont, but still spends much of her time in Georgia.



 

Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A powerful writer, May 10, 2003
By 
"curlyquilt" (Northeastern Illinois) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Wild Card Quilt: Taking a Chance on Home (The World As Home) (Hardcover)
Janisse Ray is passionate about the environment, most specifically that part of it in southeast Georgia. Her environment is mostly the natural world--the longleaf pine forest (the remnants thereof), the Altamaha River--but also the human world in the small town of Baxley, her family farmstead, her father's junkyard. She left these surroundings to go to college, first in north Georgia and then in Montana. She "took a chance on home" (the book's subtitle) when she returned to Baxley with her young son, determined to make a life for them both. She demonstrates that ability to observe, think, and then put into words those observations and thoughts is a far greater treasure than glitz and glamour.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The importance of community, December 1, 2003
By 
This review is from: Wild Card Quilt: Taking a Chance on Home (The World As Home) (Hardcover)
What a beautiful testament to the importance of community and place. Wendell Berry must have cheered when he read this book. From the story of working together to save the local school, to the inspiring beginning and growth of the Altamaha Riverkeepers, to the successful Nature Conservancy purchase of the Moody Forest Janisse Ray describes the power of ordinary people working together to save their community and it's gifts of nature.

In a description of a community that has been torn apart but still has people fighting for it, Berry writes, "Madie now lives not far down the road from the ghost town of Osierfield in the renovated schoolhouse. Milton is in the old depot. A marble column that held up the post office is part of another house nearby. It is as if the residents of the disappearing town are hanging onto pieces of it, because that's what you have left when a community falls apart, pieces, and between all the pieces, you have the ghosts who knew the place when it was less rudimentary and more whole, who are eternally present, inhabiting the town's hollows like wind and weeds. Each morning early Madie drives her old truck to the lone business left operating in Osierfield, Georgia, and opens her doors one more day."

May we all learn to treasure our small towns and communities.

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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wild Card Woman, July 1, 2003
By 
Maynard L. Hiss (Gainesville, FL USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Wild Card Quilt: Taking a Chance on Home (The World As Home) (Hardcover)
I read the book straight through after getting it. But did not read it in the same order of the chapters. It is written like a quilt allowing you to read what you want, randomly as you would look at a quilt's intricate details. Yet no matter how read, you end up with a larger perspective and pattern that gives you much greater meaning and understanding.

It is nice for Janisse to allow the reader the freedom of finding ones own perspective and interests when reading the book. It also makes sharing the experience of the book with friend and family easier.

My friend read the chapter of the writing group, right after coming from her own writing group. In a stone faced way she put the book down after reading the chapter, and burst out laughing. There was a part I read about Janisse's father and her in a big fight that made me cry at a moment in the interchange.

It would make good reading for someone contemplating going home to a rural community, or for someone who never dreamed of doing so. It is a poetic story of family and home and geography.

Janisse weaves very different personal yet universal experiences with family and friends, rural community, and natural and cultural landscapes into a geographic quilt, giving an emergent property of perspective, that is difficult to see without being layed out in full view like a picture - and with the benefit of context in time and space and emotion.

There are many reasons that a person goes back to their origins.

Janisse goes back much like a wild animal that has been expatriated from a geographic area. She comes back to rediscover the origins if birth, and fill to fill gaps left in her imagination and community.

What is nice is that she finds a niche with intelligence, and sensitivity to community and region. I can imagine native species like panther and wolves having a more difficult time rediscovering their original landscapes, even though they might play an equal or more important role. Reintroducing fire to the pineland landscpae is also difficult, but necessary.

Janisse comes back as quite as she can, and slowly finds a role. Not a dominant role but one which fills a gap. She is more like the Ivory-Billed Woodpecker than a panther or wolve or fire, being sensitive and fragile; and having an infinity for home and old growth and wild romote places. At the same time providing intelligence and energy that those in the rural communities and cities can benefit from.

Rural communities in the south need natives, especially those that can fill important roles. Too many rural areas export not only there natural resources, but also their most valuable human resources. They become vulnerable to exotics who completely transform and exploit the community without consideration of the integrity of local community or ecology and its needs. They come without understanding place. Much of what remains is remanents of a highly exploited cultural and ecological resources.

What is nice is that, like the coming home of an Ivory Billed Woodpecker Janisse helps facilitate the rediscovery of interest in rural community assets like schools and remenants of wild places, like pines and rivers that are critical assets of the geography.

Janisse uses her skills with those of the locals to reclaim geography and recreate the imgination of place. She comes not like a conquering hero, but like wild card pattern in quilt that catches your eye, without dominating your thought. She makes you think about important things. She offers an alternative future senaarios for geography that preserves and rediscover inherient values, while helping to create new values. This is in harsh contrast to to those that exploit rural landscapes without the imagination of cultural and ecological values that have existed, but have been largely surpressed.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
"When I shoved open the door of my grandmother Beulah's farmhouse, shut tight and neglected many heavy-hearted years, I entered a history that stretched backward not simply to the limits of my memory but to the farthest point of my family's memory, although" Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
longleaf pine
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Uncle Bill, Miss Elizabeth, Market Bulletin, Nature Conservancy, Aunt Joan, Moody Swamp, Altamaha Riverkeeper, Moody Forest, Appling County, Uncle James, Altamaha Elementary, Aunt Elizabeth, James Holland, Suwannee River, Aunt Jean, Jake Moody, South Dakota, Spring Branch Community, The Rural In-Between, Tommy Davis
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