Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Janisse Ray

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Language
  
English

Genre
  
memoirs

Nationality
  
USA

Name
  
Janisse Ray


Citizenship
  
USA

Role
  
Writer

Period
  
Contemporary

Awards
  
American Book Awards

Janisse Ray Janisse Ray Home

Born
  
February 2, 1962 (age 62) Baxley GA, USA (
1962-02-02
)

Occupation
  
Professor, environmental activist

Education
  
University of Montana, Florida State University, North Georgia College & State University

Books
  
Ecology of a Cracker childhood, The Seed Underground: A Growin, Wild card quilt, Drifting Into Darien: A Personal, Pinhook

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Janisse Ray (born 1962) is an American writer, naturalist and environmental activist. She was born on February 2 in Baxley, Georgia, the daughter of Franklin D. and Lee Ada Branch Ray. She attended North Georgia College, 1980–82; Florida State University, BA, 1984, and the University of Montana, MFA, 1997.

Contents

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Her first book, Ecology of a Cracker Childhood, recounts her experiences growing up in a junkyard, the daughter of a poor, white, fundamentalist Christian family. The book interweaves family history and memoir with natural history writing—specifically, descriptions of the ecology of the vanishing longleaf pine forests that once blanketed much of the South. The book won the American Book Award, the Southern Book Critics Circle Award and the Southern Environmental Law Center Award for Outstanding Writing on the Southern environment. It also was chosen for the "All Georgia Reading the Same Book" project by the Georgia Center for the Book.

Janisse Ray FileJanisse Rayjpg Wikimedia Commons

Ray's second book, Wild Card Quilt, recounts her experiences of moving back home to Georgia with her son after attending graduate school in Montana.

Janisse Ray Statesboro Magazine

Her third book, Pinhook, tells the story of Pinhook Swamp, the land that connects the Okefenokee Swamp in Georgia and Osceola National Forest in Florida

Her fourth book, Drifting into Darien, published in 2011, describes her experiences on and knowledge about the Altamaha River, which runs from middle Georgia to the Atlantic Ocean at Darien.

Ray published a book of poetry, A House of Branches, in 2010, and has been a contributor to Audubon, Orion and other magazines, as well as a commentator for NPR's Living on Earth. An environmental activist, she has campaigned on behalf of the Altamaha River and the Moody Swamp.

She teaches in the Chatham University Low-Residency Master of Fine Arts Program in Creative Writing.

She has a son, Silas Ausable, who attended the University of Massachusetts. As a student there he studied landscape architecture.

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Books

  • Ecology of a Cracker Childhood, memoir (Minneapolis: Milkweed Editions, 2000).
  • Wild Card Quilt: Taking a Chance on Home, memoir (Minneapolis: Milkweed Editions, 2003).
  • Between Two Rivers: Stories from the Red Hills to the Gulf, (Co-editor, with Susan Cerulean and Laura Newtown) nonfiction (Tallahassee: Heart of the Earth, 2004).
  • Pinhook: Finding Wholeness in a Fragmented Land,, nonfiction (White River Junction: Chelsea Green Publishing Company, 2005).
  • A House of Branches,, poetry (Nicholasville: Wind Publications, 2010).
  • Drifting into Darien: a Personal and Natural History of the Altamaha River, nonfiction (Athens: The University of Georgia Press, 2011).
  • The Seed Underground: A Growing Revolution to Save Food, nonfiction (White River Junction: Chelsea Green Publishing Company, 2012).
  • References

    Janisse Ray Wikipedia