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Where Light takes its Color From the Sea

Where Light takes its Color From the Sea
By James D. Houston

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Stories and essays by the highly acclaimed author of Snow Mountain Passage and coauthor of Farewell to Manzanar. Taking inspiration from California s breathtaking landscapes, history, and distinctive way of life, Where Light Take Its Color from the Sea reveals a writer s keen appreciation of place. This collection of Houston s shorter work spans his forty-year career and tackles varied topics: the concept of regionalism, lessons of a master potter, the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, and various aspects of American history, including the gold rush, the Donner party, and the internment of Japanese Americans during WWII. Santa Cruz a coastal city circumscribed by a mountain range where Houston makes his home provides both a literal and figurative place from which to stand and observe. From the historic cupola of his house, he describes the timeworn candy store across the street, the touch of light on the mountains and the sea, his forebears journey to California, and other perspectives on place. A new regionalism is on the rise, according to Houston, one that is characterized by conscious choice and has a higher level of awareness about the interlocking and interdependent workings of the world. Those who are familiar with the author s novels will enjoy the eloquence of his shorter works, while others will be delighted to discover this writer, traveler, and native Californian.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1204337 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-04-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 306 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
Born in San Francisco in 1933, James D. Houston grew up in the Bay Area and was a Stegner Fellow at Stanford. After he married Jeanne Wakatsuki, the couple bought a Victorian fixer-upper in Santa Cruz in 1962. It's strange, Houston writes in his opening essay, "to be rooted in the land of the rootless." Yet both he and his work - nine books of fiction and more than a dozen of nonfiction written, edited or collaborated on - found inspiration in California. "Where Light Takes its Color From the Sea," a welcome retrospective sampler from Houston's prolific career, comprises pieces published during the past 40 years. "The View From Santa Cruz" (1964) introduces his love of place, "this curve of coast" where the sea is ever present and the town's "turrets and cupolas and bungalows and fleet of fishing boats" have been "a refuge from change itself." In "Loma Prieta, Part One... he admits the addition of a University of California campus, small-craft harbor, bigger highways, more tourists and development remade Santa Cruz from a slumbering resort town to "New Age headquarters." Just as quickly, however, the Bay Area's fabled earthquakes unmade almost everything. ... Both parts of Houston's "Loma Prieta" essay follow October 1989's "ruinous disaster" that left locals wondering if the town (never mind its unique spirit) would survive. Survive, they did, Houston shows, despite the fact that California's virtues "seem fated to bring about the state's undoing." The climate he so loves, the mountains, the sea, the "natural blessings" are all pressured by a seemingly endless flood of new pioneers seeking the very amenities that always attracted immigrants. In "Coast Range Sutra" (1995), the couple visits Tassajara canyon. Houston's prose on a Zen center evokes the place's attention to contemplation and respite from busy lives. ...Houston's half-dozen pieces about his admiration for his chosen world are followed by a section called "Kinship." In these selections, he reminisces about family history and a black-sheep uncle. "Houston and his wife team up in a marvelous piece called "Another Kind of Western" (1976), which describes making the film of the book they co-wrote, "Farewell to Manzanar." In 1942, Wakatsuki was 7 when her family was relocated to a Japanese internment camp. The film set brought everything back to her: the dust, the heat, the exile. Everything was so attentively re-created, she found herself "close to tears most of the time." Houston's California notebook wraps up with four short stories. Among them, "A Family Resemblance" (1989), which tells of a young Californian selling a car to a Chinese medical student. (Houston applies here an approach he credits to Grace Paley, who advised him that "to get the story told you have to tell two stories.") And "Gasoline" (1980), which recounts the struggle of a "gasoline junkie" to fill his car's tank during the Arab oil embargo, couldn't be more timely. Happily, all the pieces in this collection are a delight, whether you're reading them the first time or coming back for seconds. --San Francisco Chronicle E5 4/22/08 Irene Warner

About the Author
Born in San Francisco, James D. Houston has lived for many years in Santa Cruz. From this vantage point he has explored, both in fiction and nonfiction, the western U.S. and the Asia Pacific region. He has written eight novels, the most recent including Bird of Another Heaven and Snow Mountain Passage, the latter named one of the year s best books by the Los Angeles Times and the Washington Post. With his wife, Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston, he co-authored Farewell to Manzanar, a novel about the Japanese American internment. Among his numerous honors are a Wallace Stegner Fellowship at Stanford, Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio residency program, two American Book Awards, and the Humanitas Prize.


Customer Reviews

California, a brief introduction5
Santa Cruz writer James D. Houston has collected a wonderful set of essays, short stories, vignettes and reflections about the Golden State in this just-released volume from Heyday Books in Berkeley. Known for his recent historical fiction about the Donner Party (Snow Mountain Passage) and the cross-cultural currents between California and Hawaii (Bird of Another Heaven), "Where the Light Takes Its Color from the Sea" will introduce the reader to a more personal side of this lifelong observer of the California scene. Why he became a writer; how California has affected his writing (and that of Raymond Carver, Wallace Stegner and John Steinbeck); his take, sometimes in satirical form, on the crazy contradictions of living in a place at once so beautiful and so maddeningly inconvenient and expensive. How even the light, which does indeed take its color from the sea around here, works on you, tempers your certainties, enchants you, and convinces you never to leave. A book for the two categories (in my thinking) of Americans: those who live here and wonder about this place they call home, and those who've always imagined being here. Either way, buy it, read it and learn from forty years' worth of thought & musing from this native son of the Golden West.

Insightful and highly recommended5
Little pieces of wisdom can do a lot for one's view of the world. "Where Light Takes Its Color from the Sea: A California Notebook" is a collection of essays on the world written by James Houston as he let it all sink in while vacationing in Santa Cruz, California. Poignant, witty, and entertaining, "Where Light Takes Its Color from the Sea" is insightful and highly recommended.