Hillerman Country |
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HarperCollins: New York, 1991 |
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240 pages | November 2008 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Hillerman Country is a large-format book of photography of the desert landscape of the American Southwest, centered a little south of the Four Corners where the states of Utah, Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico meet. The beautiful photographs by Barney Hillerman are well-chosen and well-composed, representative of the variety in this wild open geography. The text by Tony Hillerman discusses the nature of the land, often harsh and bare but on closer acquaintance, subtly fascinating and full of lovely shadings of the stubborn rocks and sand, and the determined plants and animals and people who thrive here. While Hillerman Country isn't intended as ethnography or history or ecology, there are plenty of neat observations by Hillerman in all these areas. He recalls to mind other writers who fell in love with this land, Conrad Richter and D. H. Lawrence. After an Introduction, the Hillermans' sections include:
A vast range of beautiful places. Here's Tony Hillerman describing one:
Hillerman Country can be read as a generally illustrative companion volume to Tony Hillerman's fine mysteries set in this area. Although it has some quotations from the novels, it is primarily a book of photographs and secondarily about the land and its peoples. It is not a novel-readers' series guidebook with maps and story background, like C. S. Forester's The Hornblower Companion or Louis L'Amour's The Sackett Companion. That said, this is a lovely and informative book.
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© 2008 Robert Wilfred Franson |
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