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At a poetry gathering one evening, authors Michael Perkins and Will Nixon decided to walk across Woodstock not just the modern town of busy roads, but the older village of bluestone quarries, abandoned forest paths and mountain views they had all to themselves. Walking Woodstock collects their adventures, many first published in the Woodstock Times, that ranged from the delights of finding spring flowers to the fears of a mountain rescue. Full of humor, friendship, nature, hikers' lore and walkers' musings, these journeys reveal the wild heart that beats in all of us when we set forth to explore our home terrain on foot.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
At a poetry gathering one evening, authors Michael Perkins and Will Nixon decided to walk across Woodstock not just the modern town of busy roads, but the older village of bluestone quarries, abandoned forest paths and mountain views they had all to themselves. Walking Woodstock collects their adventures, many first published in the Woodstock Times, that ranged from the delights of finding spring flowers to the fears of a mountain rescue. Full of humor, friendship, nature, hikers' lore and walkers' musings, these journeys reveal the wild heart that beats in all of us when we set forth to explore our home terrain on foot.
Autorenporträt
Michael Perkins grew up in southern Ohio and graduated from Ohio University (Athens) in 1963 after studies at The New School. He was a welfare caseworker, a remedial reading teacher and a bookstore owner, later becoming a freelance writer and small press editor (Tompkins Square Press and Croton Press, Ltd.). He arrived in Woodstock, NY in 1972, and worked as a program director for various arts organizations. He has published over 40 books of poetry, fiction, literary criticism and local history. While in Woodstock he became an avid hiker and in 1986 he walked across Connecticut in a week. Will Nixon grew up in the Connecticut suburbs, spent his young adulthood in Hoboken and Manhattan, then moved to a Catskills log cabin in 1996 complete with a wood stove and mice. For years, he wrote environmental journalism, then turned to poetry and personal essays. His work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and listed in Best American Essays 2004. He now lives in Woodstock, NY with a wall thermostat for heat, but still can't get rid of the mice.