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White Poplar, Black Locust

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Louise Wagenknecht grew up in one of the West's last company lumber towns, a small community called Hilt on the California-Oregon border.

There she witnessed the dying years of a unique way of life, the tail-end of the 1950s lumber boom that would devastate the ancient old-growth forests of the Klamath Mountains, as well as the people of Hilt, whose lives were inextricably tied to the company lumber mill. "White Poplar, Black Locust" is the story of that transformation, but it is also something more - a noteworthy addition to the literature of place, and a sensitive and richly textured family memoir.

As Wagenknecht unravels the threads that still bind her to both Hilt's history and her own, unforgettable characters emerge, and what should have been the happy ending to this story, the marriage of her divorced mother to a forester working for the Fruit Growers Supply Company, becomes instead the end of childhood innocence, foretelling the demise of the mill and the end of Hilt itself.

Expertly weaving memoir and history against the backdrop of a powerful yet little-known landscape, "White Poplar, Black Locust" is an immensely readable narrative of pain, loss, and ultimate survival. Louise Wagenknecht has worked for the United States Forest Service for almost thirty years, most recently on the Salmon-Challis National Forest in Idaho, where she is a writer and editor at the Forest Service headquarters.

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Product Details
University of Nebraska Press
0803248040 / 9780803248045
Hardback
979.421
01/02/2003
United States
240 pages, 16 illustrations
156 x 235 mm, 526 grams
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