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My Paddle to the Sea

Eleven Days on the River of the Carolinas

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
“In an age that values faster and faster travel, Lane’s river memoir affirms the great value of floating and observing.”—Booklist
 
Three months after a family vacation in Costa Rica ends in tragedy when two fellow rafters die on the flooded Rio Reventazón, John Lane sets out with friends from his own backyard in upcountry South Carolina to calm his nerves and to paddle to the sea.
Like Huck Finn, Lane sees a river journey as a portal to change, but unlike Twain’s character, Lane isn’t escaping. He’s getting intimate with the river that flows right past his home in the Spartanburg suburbs. Lane’s three-­hundred-mile float trip takes him down the Broad River and into Lake Marion before continuing down the Santee River. Along the way, Lane recounts local history and spars with streamside literary presences such as Mind of the South author W. J. Cash; Henry Savage, author of the Rivers of America Series volume on the Santee; novelist and Pulitzer Prize–winner Julia Peterkin; early explorer John Lawson; and poet and outdoor writer Archibald Rutledge.
 
Lane ponders the sites of old cotton mills; abandoned locks, canals, and bridges; ghost towns fallen into decay a century before; Indian mounds; American Revolutionary and Civil War battle sites; nuclear power plants; and boat landings. Along the way he encounters a cast of characters Twain himself would envy—perplexed fishermen, catfish clean­ers, river rats, and a trio of drug-addled drifters on a lonely boat dock a day’s paddle from the sea.
By the time Lane and his companions finally approach the ocean about forty miles north of Charleston, they have to fight the tide and set a furious pace. Through it all, paddle stroke by paddle stroke, Lane is reminded why life and rivers have always been wedded together.
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    • Kirkus

      August 15, 2011

      A meditative account of a 300-mile float trip to the sea, from South Carolina's Broad River to the Intercoastal Waterway north of Charleston.

      Just three months before, Lane (English and Environmental Studies/Wofford Coll.; Chattooga: Descending into the Myth of Deliverance River, 2004, etc.) had taken his family on an adventure trip to Costa Rica. Unfortunately, the trip ended under conditions of exceptionally high water, several canoes capsized and the guide and one other kayaker drowned. The author explains that starting out on another boating trip was a way for him to come to accept the painful truth that "mistakes and surprises are often what form a memorable journey, but they're also what make for tragedies." Lane was joined on the different legs of the journey by friends. For much of the time, the weather was unseasonably wet, but this did not diminish the adventurers' enthusiasm. Throughout the trip, the author muses about the historical ruins they encounter, such as an old grist mill and the old canal that was closed to barge traffic 150 years ago; he compares them to the six power dams that they pass. Exploring the past as he travels peacefully down the river, Lane has an important realization: "A river trip that I was imagining as a journey, an adventure, had been, only two hundred years earlier, as common as a road trip on a present-day interstate highway."

      A final arduous paddle against the tide takes the author to a successful conclusion of this low-key spiritual adventure.

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

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  • English

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