In the Company of Light

Author John Hay
$16.00 US
Beacon Press
48 per carton
On sale Feb 23, 1999 | 9780807085394
Sales rights: World except AU/NZ

One of the most daring of contemporary writers in the genre. --Norton Anthology of Nature Writing

"[Hay's] books about Cape Cod belong in the company of Thoreau, Donald Culross Peattie, Henry Beston, and Rachel Carson." --Robert Taylor, The Boston Globe

"Hay's new book, published in his 83rd year, is autumnal in spirit and in substance. . . . The essence of this enterprise is a kind of prayer, eloquent and deeply felt." --Richard Todd, Civilization

"[Hay] is, to my mind, without question this country's greatest living nature writer. . . . He writes out of such a profoundly poetic impulse that he cannot help but produce prose of a high literary order." --Robert Finch, The Cape Codder

"Hay loses himself in details, describing the minute play of light through grasses, the reflection of a water bug on the rocks of a stream bottom, the fungi on fallen trees that begin to glow with an eerie luminescence. . . . [He] is not only the observer of what most of us don't see, but of what we may never get a chance to see." --David Cline, Hartford Advocate

"In the Company of Light shares with considerable humility the well-honed insights of a man rich in the wisdom of age and observation of nature."--Nancy Grape, Maine Sunday Telegram

Praise

One of the most daring of contemporary writers in the genre. --Norton Anthology of Nature Writing

"[Hay's] books about Cape Cod belong in the company of Thoreau, Donald Culross Peattie, Henry Beston, and Rachel Carson." --Robert Taylor, The Boston Globe

"Hay's new book, published in his 83rd year, is autumnal in spirit and in substance. . . . The essence of this enterprise is a kind of prayer, eloquent and deeply felt." --Richard Todd, Civilization

"[Hay] is, to my mind, without question this country's greatest living nature writer. . . . He writes out of such a profoundly poetic impulse that he cannot help but produce prose of a high literary order." --Robert Finch, The Cape Codder

"Hay loses himself in details, describing the minute play of light through grasses, the reflection of a water bug on the rocks of a stream bottom, the fungi on fallen trees that begin to glow with an eerie luminescence. . . . [He] is not only the observer of what most of us don't see, but of what we may never get a chance to see." --David Cline, Hartford Advocate

"In the Company of Light shares with considerable humility the well-honed insights of a man rich in the wisdom of age and observation of nature."--Nancy Grape, Maine Sunday Telegram