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Wendell Berry (born August 5, 1934) is an American, novelist, essayist, poet, teacher, cultural critic and farmer. He is the author of more than forty books of fiction, poetry, and essays.
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Berry was born in Henry County, Kentucky in 1934, the first of four children born to John and Virginia Berry. His father was a tobacco farmer in Henry County, and at least five generations in both his father's and mother's families have lived in Henry county as farmers. He attended secondary school at Millersburg Military Institute, and then pursued a Bachelor's and a Master's degree in English at the University of Kentucky at Lexington. In 1957 he completed his Master's degree and married Tanya Amyx. In 1958 Berry received a Wallace Stegner Fellowship and attended Stanford University's creative writing program, where he studied with Stegner in a seminar that included Larry McMurtry, Edward Abbey and Ken Kesey. In 1964 he and Tanya purchased the Lane's Landing farm close to his parents' birth places, and in 1965 moved onto the land to become farmers (of tobacco, corn and small grains) on what would eventually become a 125-acre homestead.
Berry was granted a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship which took him and his family to Italy and France in 1961. From 1962 to 1964 he taught English at New York University’s University College in the Bronx. In the fall of 1964, he began teaching creative writing at the University of Kentucky. In 1977, he resigned from the University of Kentucky. In 1987, he returned to University of Kentucky, teaching literature and education. Today he still lives, writes and farms at Lane's Landing near Port Royal, Kentucky, alongside the Kentucky River, not far from where it flows into the Ohio.
He is a prolific author, with at least twenty-five books (or chapbooks) of poems, sixteen volumes of essays, and eleven novels and short story collections to his name. His writing is grounded in the notion that one's work ought to be rooted in and responsive to one's place. His poetic voice is direct and resonant, indebted as much to Hesiod and Virgil as to Whitman, as much to William Carlos Williams as to Ronsard, Wordsworth, or Alexander Pope.
His nonfiction serves as a long defense of the life in which he finds value. According to Berry, this good life includes: sustainable agriculture, appropriate technologies, healthy rural communities, the Gospels, connection to place, the pleasures of good food, stewardship of Creation, husbandry, good work, local economics, the miracle of life, fidelity, frugality, reverence, peacemaking and the interconnectedness of life. The threats Berry finds to this good life include: industrial farming and the industrialization of life, ignorance, hubris, greed, violence against others and against the natural world, our declining topsoil, global economics, environmental destruction.
Wendell Berry is often cited as a defender of agrarian ideals and frequently voices his appreciation for the Amish. [1]
Berry’s fiction to date consists of seven novels and the twenty-three short stories collected in That Distant Land (2004) which, when read as a whole, form a chronicle of the small Kentucky town of Port William.
In light of this long-term, ongoing exploration of the life of an imagined place, Berry has often been compared to William Faulkner. Yet, although Port William is no stranger to murder, suicide, alcoholism, and the full range of losses that touch human lives, it lacks the extreme delineation of character and plot that is found in much of Faulkner. For this reason, Berry is sometimes described as working in an idealized, pastoral, or even utopian mode, but he resists this characterization of his work.
The Port William fiction is Berry’s attempt to portray, on a local scale, what "a human economy ... conducted with reverence" (The Way of Ignorance, 50) has looked like in the past -- and what civic, domestic, and personal virtues might be evoked by some such economy if it were pursued today.
The effect of a profound shift in the agricultural practices of the United States, and the disappearance of agrarian life, is one of the great concerns of the Port William fiction, though the theme appears frequently as only a background or subtext to the stories themselves. Social changes, as well as seasonal ones, mark the passage of time. It is clear to those who read Berry’s essays that the Port William stories allow him to explore the human dimensions of the decline of the family farm and farm community as it encounters the expansion of post-World War II agribusiness influences. But these works rarely fall into a simple didacticism and are never merely tales of decline. Each is grounded in a concern for the honest depiction of character and community. In A Place on Earth (1967), for example, farmer Mat Feltner must come to terms with the loss of his only son, Virgil. In the course of the novel, we see how not only Mat but the entire community wrestles with the acute and very precise costs of World War II.
Berry’s fiction also allows him to explore the literal and metaphorical implications of marriage as that which binds individuals, families, and communities to each other and to Nature itself - though, not all of Port William is happily or conventionally married. “Old Jack” Beechum struggles with significant incompatibilities with his wife and a brief, yet fulfilling extramarital affair; barber Jayber Crow lives with forlorn, secret, unconsumated love for a woman and the belief that he is mentally married to her though she knows nothing about it; and Burley Coulter never formalizes his bond with Kate Helen Branch, the mother of his son. Yet, each of these men find themselves firmly bound up in the community, the “membership,” of Port William.
Wendell Berry is an important figure in the history of American nature writing and environmental writing, along with Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry Thoreau, John Muir, Aldo Leopold, Mary Austin, Rachel Carson, Marilynne Robinson, Annie Dillard, Barry Lopez, Edward Abbey, Gary Snyder, Peter Matthiessen, Terry Tempest Williams, Barbara Kingsolver, Bill McKibben, David Orr and (many) others.