Tuesday, October 4, 2016

#522 Mannahatta- John Keene


#522 Mannahatta- John Keene

Mannahatta is the Lenape word for “Land of Many Hills,” the name taken in New Amsterdam for Manhattan and the name of a great poem by Walt Whitman. A man from Santo Domingo, who had bought his own freedom, now finds himself alone scouting land in the “New World.” He is having a spiritual experience and stakes down a cross hoping that the First People don’t remove it before he can return.

This is the first story in the new collection, Counternarratives by John Keene. It is a powerful opening look at what is already being talked about as one of the best books of the year. I like the rich descriptions of the riverfront and the landscape; the power of a man by himself in the woods near the water, in a place unknown and ready to be explored.

There is a good lineage of literature that has tapped into the emotional history of early American “discovery” in the lower Hudson. Besides the obvious Whitman reference, great art and literature has sprouted from this very place; names like Asher Durant, Thomas Cole, and more recently TC Boyle or Edward Rutherford have used the beauty and spirit of this region as springboards for great art.

“A thousand birds proclaimed his ascent up the incline; the bushes shuddered with the alarm of creatures stirred from there lees; insects rose in a screen before his eyes, vanishing. When he had secured the boat and settled onto a sloping meadow, he sat, to wet his throat with water from his winesack, and orient himself, and rest. Only then did he look back.”


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