Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Goodbye to a River

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Illustrator
  
Russell Waterhouse

Publisher
  
Alfred A. Knopf

Pages
  
306

Originally published
  
1960

Genre
  
Non-fiction

4.2/5
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Language
  
English

Publication date
  
1960

OCLC
  
478781

Author
  
John Graves

Goodbye to a River t0gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcRWQ7aEj02HwS8y25

Nominations
  
National Book Award for Nonfiction

Similar
  
John Graves books, Non-fiction books

Goodbye to a River is a book by John Graves, published in 1960. It is a "semi-historical" account of a canoe trip made by the author during the fall of 1957 down a stretch of the Brazos River in North Central Texas, between Possum Kingdom Dam and Lake Whitney. The book presents both the author's account of the trip itself and numerous stories about the history and settlement of the area around the river and of North Central Texas. The title refers to Graves' childhood association with the river and the country surrounding it, and his fear of the "drowning" effect that a proposed series of flood-control dams (most notably, Lake Granbury) would have on the river.

Only three of the dams were built on the river, but at one time up to thirteen were proposed at various locations along its course to the Gulf of Mexico. The success of Goodbye to a River is often cited as a major reason that the proposed dams were never built.

The book is acclaimed as a work of both conservationism and history and has been compared to Walden by Henry David Thoreau.

References

Goodbye to a River Wikipedia