A Song for the River Audiobook, by Philip Connors Play Audiobook Sample

A Song for the River Audiobook

A Song for the River Audiobook, by Philip Connors Play Audiobook Sample
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Read By: Adam Verner Publisher: Blackstone Publishing Listen Time: at 1.0x Speed 4.50 hours at 1.5x Speed 3.38 hours at 2.0x Speed Release Date: August 2018 Format: Unabridged Audiobook ISBN: 9781982545598

Quick Stats About this Audiobook

Total Audiobook Chapters:

9

Longest Chapter Length:

69:35 minutes

Shortest Chapter Length:

13:11 minutes

Average Chapter Length:

44:49 minutes

Audiobooks by this Author:

1

Listeners Also Enjoyed:

Publisher Description

From one of the last working fire lookouts comes this sequel to the award-winning Fire Season―a story of calamity and resilience in the world’s first wilderness.

A dozen years into his dream job keeping watch over the Gila National Forest of New Mexico, Philip Connors bore witness to the blaze he had always feared: a megafire that forced him off his mountain by helicopter and forever changed the forest and watershed he loved. It was one of many transformations that arrived in quick succession, not just fire and flood but the death of a fellow lookout in a freak accident and a tragic plane crash that rocked the community he called home.

Beginning as an elegy for a friend he cherished like a brother, A Song for the River opens into a chorus of voices singing in celebration of a landscape redolent with meaning―and the river that runs through it, whose waters are threatened by a potential dam.

The ways of water and the ways of fire, the lines tragedy carves on a life, the persistent renewal of green shoots sprouting from ash: these are the subjects of A Song for the River. Its argument on behalf of things wild and free could not be more timely; the goal is nothing less than permanent protection for that rarest of things in the American West, a free-flowing river―the sinuous and gorgeous Gila.

It must not perish.

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“Beautifully examines themes of fire and water, life and death, and wonder and grief…[with] sumptuous descriptions of the Gila’s natural wonder…This powerful work belongs with the classics of the nature writing genre and is equally important as a rumination on living and dying.”

— Publishers Weekly (starred review) 

Quotes

  • “In the style of Annie Dillard, Anne LaBastille, and Aldo Leopold, Connors interlaces all of these stories into a poignant plea for change—of our attitudes toward nature as well as to all forms of life.”

    — Library Journal (starred review)
  • “A heartfelt, well-written volume of vignettes and reflections of a man who—much like his long lineage of fire lookout forebears—gladly chooses to escape civilization for the natural world.”

    — Kirkus Reviews
  • “[Connors’] writing is pure, exact, compassionate, and often elegiac…I loved this book."

    — Benjamin Alire Sáenz, PEN/Faulkner Award–winning author
  • “A Song for the River is nothing short of spectacular…Beautifully nuanced and written in masterful prose, this is a necessary read.”

    — Alfredo Corchado, author of Midnight in Mexico
  • “A story of love and loss along the sacred waters of the Gila river, in the heart of the Gila wilderness…The book was a page-turner for me, lyrically paced and a real pleasure to read.”

    — Doug Peacock, author of Grizzly Years

Awards

  • A Publishers Weekly Pick of Best Reads for Summer

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About Philip Connors

Philip Connors was born in Iowa, grew up on a farm in Minnesota, and studied journalism at the University of Montana. Beginning in 1999 he worked at the Wall Street Journal, mostly as an editor on the leisure and arts page. In 2002 he left New York to become a fire lookout in New Mexico’s Gila National Forest, where he has spent every summer since. That experience became the subject of his first book, the multiaward–winning Fire Season: Field Notes From a Wilderness Lookout. His second book, All the Wrong Places, a memoir of life in the shadow of his brother’s suicide, was published in 2015 and selected as one of the 100 best nonfiction books of the year by Kirkus Reviews. He lives in the Mexican-American borderlands.

About Adam Verner

Adam Verner is a stage, film, television, and voice actor and an Earphones Award–winning audiobook narrator. He holds a BS in theater arts from Bradley University and an MFA from Chicago College of the Performing Arts at Roosevelt University.