Blue Grama
- Publisher
- Wild Sage Press
- Initial publish date
- Nov 2014
- Category
- Nature
- Recommended Age
- 14 to 18
- Recommended Grade
- 9 to 12
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9780988122963
- Publish Date
- Nov 2014
- List Price
- $18
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
Blue Grama describes the intensity that is prairie life - people, plants and spaces - and the drive that sends us away and brings us back again to our roots. From conversations with a prairie bush to reflections on the lives of prairie people who populate the author's past, this visual treasure is an emotive ode to all things prairie. Equal to the writings (poetry, songs and one prose piece) are the author's own botanical illustrations, accompanied by field notes, which portray her delight in prairie details not often seen until you kneel amongst the grasses.
About the author
Contributor Notes
Heather Peat Hamm is a prairie ecologist by training and prairie advocate at heart. Fifteen years in agricultural and ecological research left Heather with a keen observational bent and drawing skills honed at the microscope. She has studied ecology at universities of Saskatchewan, Toronto, and Alaska, Fairbanks and broadened her botanical illustrations skills through Cornell University. Heather is also a musician. She currently lives in Forget, Saskatchewan.
Excerpt: Blue Grama (illustrated by Heather Peat Hamm)
Grace
My father and I
fixing the discer
parts collected from the scrap pile
tools at hand
me the monkey
he a long lifetime of fixing and farming
I follow directions
and sweat and grit my teeth
but still
stuck somehow
the machine and us
at an impasse
I push and prod again
knuckles jamming
the metal resists
stubborn
he watches quietly
guiding me
I suggest an idea
another approach
from my skinny girl head
and this man
70-plus years farming
nods and agrees to try
Open
like the land
Editorial Reviews
Blue Grama "is a slender volume chock full of drawings, poems and song lyrics. [Peat] Hamm is a ferocious advocate of the prairie in its natural state and stands up tall for the grasses...An essay at book's end called Northern Limits tells why she loves blue grama so, and it's something of a manifesto, written in love and full botanical knowledge, the little book itself summed up and put right."
- Bill Robertson, The Star Phoenix