From Publishers Weekly
These 30 essays collected by Wilson, who edits Preservation magazine, where the articles were originally published, reflect the importance of place in the lives of humans. As different from one another as the contrast between a refuge found by Phyllis Rose in New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art ("Metropolitan Hideaways") and Suzanne Freeman's heartfelt reminiscence of her grandmother's home in Murfreesboro, Tenn. ("The Museum of Who We Were"), these pieces are all equally engaging. Several of the essays concentrate on the relationship between the writers' craft and where they choose to practice it. Thomas Mallon researched material for his books at the New York Public Library on 42d Street and Fifth Avenue and recalls in "Paradise Regained" his unwarranted anxiety that the reading room, "as romantic as any place in the city" would be drastically changed during a lengthy period of renovation. In "Building for the Ages," Stephen Goodwin describes how he built a cabin in Virginia as a place to work in, but wound up writing many of his books elsewhere. Of particular interest is "The Spirit of Maui," Reeve Lindbergh's evocation of the Hawaiian island that was so important to her terminally ill father that he traveled from New York to die there. On a less serious note is Ann Beattie's "Hiding Out in Ma¤analand," a tribute to Key West, one of the "comfortable repositories for the dis-located." In all, these selected essays form a delightful whole.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
This collection of 31 essays from Preservation magazine's column "Place," which debuted in 1996, features pieces from an array of talented contributors (including Noel Perrin, Anthony Walton, and Anita Desai) writing about an array of places (including Haiti, a stone wall in Vermont, and McKinney, TX). Place and preservation are closely tied, as each author writes about (and thus preserves) a place that has strongly affected his or her development. Edited by Preservation magazine editor Wilson, who also serves as the book review editor for USA Today, the collection functions less as a cohesive unit than as a series of jumping-off points for discussion or armchair travel. This results from a certain sameness of tone: whether the subject is Maui or Maine, the overarching feeling is celebratory. Nevertheless, this book is a good addition to larger public libraries. Audrey Snowden, formerly with Clark Univ., Worcester,
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.