35 Who Made a Difference: Wendell Berry
A Kentucky poet draws inspiration from the land that sustains him
- By Paul Trachtman
- Smithsonian.com, November 01, 2005, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
I ask if he sometimes feels like an Old Testament prophet, a voice in the wilderness. He can't afford such thoughts, he says. He is determined to have hope. "Part of the reason for writing all these essays is my struggle never to quit, to never utter those awful words 'it's inevitable.'" His writing has sometimes been called radical, but he thinks of himself as a conservative, conserving what is most human in our landscape and ourselves. "You know," he says, laughing, "if you subtracted the Gospels and the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence from my work, there wouldn't be very much left.”
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Comments (5)
Has Mr. Berry considered the possibility of meeting our nation's loss of small farm operations with America's growing need to put a capable and knowledgable corps of senior citizens to work ... perhaps by managing and investing in properties needing restoration and return to active production?
We retired Americans need a challenge such as this one. Might it work?
Michael Keating
seniorsmarts@hotmail.com
(Might you folks be able to pass on this email message to Mr. Berry, please?)
Posted by Michael Keating on December 8,2011 | 02:58 PM
Dear Mr. Berry -- I heard you on NPR recently and was humbled and intrigued by your wisdom. I am working on a film project which would be a followup to Joseph Campbell's myth series: the stories of people who live lives dedicated to the mythic realms -- whether they know it or not. These are the folk whose lives are lived as antidote to the dominant western modalities of consumerism, political polarity and warfare waged against those with whom we disagree.
I hope to start shooting a fund-raising reel this spring and wonder if you would be willing to be interviewed sometime in May. I realize you would need to know a lot more about my work to consider this. But just start by considering the e-mail address! I am singer, writer, and lover of children, trees and faeries.
Thanks and I hope to hear from you as I begin reading your work. I am starting with Life is a Miracle. Indeed.
sincerely.
mary jo.
Posted by Mary Jo on January 15,2010 | 09:49 AM
can you tell me a place where i can buy smith berry wine in my area
Posted by sue eaton on December 19,2009 | 12:01 AM
The fervent attachment to land of small farmers to their piece of land, reminsicent of the attachment of Joads famliy in Steinbeck's novels and of the numerous farmers in my country, India, which is mostly rural, is heartening. Salutations to Wendell Berry for standing boldly against the mad insistence on "Get Big or Get Out." Let the fight go on!
Prof S S Prabhakar Rao
Formerly Professor of English
J N T University,
Hyderabad, India
Posted by S.S.Prabhakar Rao on September 30,2009 | 09:18 PM
You are one of the wisest person on earth due to your love and connection to land that is so vital and important to our survival and your article on inverting the economic order is the most important revelation on how to preserve our future that I have ever seen in my 82 years. Thank you so much.
Love
Werner
Posted by Werner Hertz on September 6,2009 | 06:42 PM