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Essays of E.B. White by E. B. White
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Essays of E.B. White (original 1977; edition 2001)

by E. B. White

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1,5091911,991 (4.37)33
Thirty-one of E.B. White's essays grouped under such headings as "The Farm," "The Planet," "Memories," and "Books, Men, and Writing."
Member:sararyan
Title:Essays of E.B. White
Authors:E. B. White
Info:Peter Smith Pub Inc (2001), Hardcover
Collections:Your library
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Essays of E.B. White by E. B. White (1977)

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» See also 33 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 19 (next | show all)
Mostly good essays. Liked the one about vacations at the Lake, the best. ( )
  kslade | Jul 19, 2023 |
New England writers have a mode - fascinated with nature, and the everyday workmanlike process of filtering the natural experience through the small routines of daily life. Frost did it with "Mending Wall", Updike with his petty domestic dramas, Thoreau with his canoe and tourist cabin. I'll throw Lowell and Dickinson's confessional poetry in with the lot, if only to support my claim that these are all fish out of water stories - what it means to be inside when you really want to be outside, to bridge the divide between the house and the forest. White famously did this with his animal stories for children, but in this collection, his neatest rhetorical trick is "Coon Tree" - a meditation on a nocturnal scavenger that segues into a discussion of Cold War politics and nuclear annihilation.
( )
  jonbrammer | Jul 1, 2023 |
Recommended for birders, animal lovers, nature lovers, small-farmers, writers and anyone who loves good writing. (This is the White of Strunk and White's "Elements of Style".)

Otherwise, rather outdated. ( )
  KENNERLYDAN | Jul 11, 2021 |
This is a widely diverse collection of essays. The sections include The Farm, The Planet, The City, Florida, Memories, Diversions and Obsessions, and Books, Men, and Writing. Some are funny, some are nostalgic, and some are just downright boring. While a few of the essays would have gotten five stars on their own, a few others would have gotten one or two stars, and most would have been somewhere in between, so I averaged it out to three stars for the collection as a whole.

Some of my favorites include “Farewell, My Lovely!” about the first Model-T and it’s idiosyncrasies; “The Years of Wonder,” about White’s month and a half aboard a cruise ship in Alaska; and “The St. Nicholas League,” about a magazine that published art and writing by children. One of my least favorites is “Mr. Forbush’s Friends,” a random collection of bird facts from Forbush’s book.

When I read my first collection of White’s essays (entitled One Man’s Meat), I was totally enchanted. I haven’t felt the same about the other two of his collections that I’ve read. There were definitely moments of enchantment, but I was expecting more. For anyone who is interested, I’d recommend One Man’s Meat as his best collection. ( )
  AmandaL. | Jan 16, 2016 |
E.B. White's essays are enduring classics, part of a rather small number of books that are enjoyable to re-read years later. His famous style does begin to seem stodgy and even a bit smug in our world, but his love of nature and ability to find humor in small details is still endearing. What struck me this time around, reading for a January 2016 book group, is his gentle approach to raging political problems of his time, the 1950s. On racism, he describes in leisurely style a vacation in Jim Crow Florida, and the astonishment of his Finnish cook that she shouldn't sit in the back of the bus. His deep identification with nature and animals implies a criticism of nuclear energy policies that threaten the environment. His appreciation of good writing brings along an implied criticism of the McCarthy era attacks on Hollywood screen writers he admires like Ring Lardner. After seeing the Trumbo film, this suddenly became much more obvious to me. Such a calm observational style could definitely improve our current political discourse if the public had the patience to think things through with care. These political implications are anything but stodgy and smug. Even his famous essay on racoons seemed to me this time like a very indirect commentary on motherhood in general. It's just easier to think about when transposed onto cute critters rather than real people. Here's a book that's definitely worth a another look. ( )
  ElenaDanielson | Jan 15, 2016 |
Showing 1-5 of 19 (next | show all)
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
E. B. Whiteprimary authorall editionscalculated
Hillgartner, MalcolmNarratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Turtle Bay, November 12, 1957 For some weeks now I have been engaged in dispersing the contents of this apartment, trying to persuade hunderds of inanimate objects to scatter and leave me alone. (Good-bye to Fourty-Eighth Street)
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Thirty-one of E.B. White's essays grouped under such headings as "The Farm," "The Planet," "Memories," and "Books, Men, and Writing."

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Book description
Table of Contents:
  1. The farm:
    • Good-bye to forty-eighth street
    • Home-coming
    • A report in spring
    • Death of a pig
    • The eye of Edna
    • Coon tree
    • A report in January
    • The winter of the great snows
    • Riposte
    • The geese
  2. The planet:
    • Letter from the East
    • Bedfellows
    • Sootfall and fallout
    • Unity
  3. The city:
    • The world of tomorrow
    • Here is New York
  4. Florida:
    • On a Florida Key
    • The ring of time
    • What do our hearts treasure?
  5. Memories:
    • Afternoon of an American boy
    • Farewell, my love!
    • The years of wonder
    • Once more to the lake
  6. Diversions and obsessions:
    • The sea and the wind that blows
    • The railroad
  7. Books, men, and writing:
    • The St. Nicholas League
    • A slight sound at evening
    • Some remarks on humor
    • Don Marquis
    • Will Strunk
    • Mr. Forbush's friends
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