Berry, Wendell. The Gift of Good Land. San Francisco: North Point Press, 1981.
Abstract
In the twenty-four essays of this
collection, Wendell Berry stresses the carefully modulated harmonics of
indivisibility in culture and agriculture, the interdependence, the
wholeness, the oneness, of man, animals, the land, the weather, and the
family. To touch one, he shows, is to tamper with them all. Here he
continues issues first raised in The
Unsettling of America; the problems addressed there are
still with us and the solutions no nearer to hand. Mr. Berry writes of
his journeys to the highlands of Peru, the deserts of southern Arizona,
and the Amish country to study traditional agricultural practices. He
writes of homesteading, tools and their uses, horses and tractors,
family work, land reclamation, diversified land use. In the title essay
Mr. Berry draws parallels between the Christian notion of stewardship
and the Buddhist doctrine of "right livelihood." He develops the
compelling argument that the "gift" of good land has strings attached:
the recipient has it only as long as he practices responsible
stewardship.