Product Details
Plain Reader

Plain Reader
By Scott Savage

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Product Description

"If information highways are the wave of the future then I will build information country roads on which the traveller can reach the truth faster by going slower. . . ."

On these same country roads, far from the intrusions of modern technology, the Amish, Quakers, and other "plain folk" live their unencumbered lives, close to the land, in peaceful, smoothly-run communities. The thought-provoking, often challenging essays in The Plain Reader are written by men and women who rarely speak outside the borders of their local townships, and provide us with unique perspectives on life stripped down to necessity. Originally published in Plain Magazine, these pieces are sure to inspire reflection.

Reading about a garden cooperative in Connecticut, the raising of a home with only plaster and straw in hand, a fascinating trip to New York City through Amish eyes, compels each of us wonder: Can I too survive without television or that high-tech appliance cluttering my kitchen counter? Am I just a cog in the wheel of the global economy? Is isolation from one another and from the earth the simple destiny of humankind? Each rich, personal essay in this provocative collection offers solace, wisdom, joy, and quiet space for contemplation.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1443366 in Books
  • Published on: 1998-05-05
  • Released on: 1998-05-05
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .50" w x 6.00" l, .82 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 272 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Amazon.com
From Scott Savage, editor of the Luddite, Quaker, and Amish magazine The Plain Reader, comes an illuminating anthology of the same name. In essays sure to enlighten and inspire even the most urban and technologically-reliant readers, the writers collected here offer a window into a pared-down life, as they search for (and find) a sense of home, intimacy, and community through the act of simplification. Discussing everything from creating a community through shared labor on a farm to reconnecting with children through home schooling and the purging of radios and televisions to using midwives in place of obstetricians and medical technology, these essays offer alternatives to corporate and electronic America, while resisting the urge to proselytize. Written with heart, thought, and good intention, The Plain Reader may very well be the late 20th century's multi-voiced answer to Henry David Thoreau's Walden. --Kera Bolonik

From Publishers Weekly
The current spate of books extolling the joys of a simpler lifestyle draw varying degrees of inspiration from the segment of the population that has lived in the simplest ways for generations. The Amish, Quaker, Shaker, Anabaptist and Mennonite peoples have always eschewed technology, government-operated schools and overpopulated communities, as well as dependence on corporations and institutions for the necessities of life. Living close to the land, sharing work, worship and play within a small community, these "plain people" claim to live out different values than the rest of America. Here, however, essays drawn from Plain magazine (edited by Savage) display the harsh critical side of what Savage calls "this strange, alternative, upside-down world of horse-driven carriages, televisionless houses, and family-sized gardens," in "communities that view the Bible as a blueprint for living." Readers seeking help in simplifying or spiritualizing their own daily lives may be shocked by the opinions with which this assembly of voices justifies and celebrates their chosen way of life ("I believe," writes Mary Ann Lieser, "one reason doctors encourage prenatal diagnostic testing is their fear of birth and of death"; "Kids are learning how to process all learning through computers," charges Jerry Mander; children "at rock concerts or sporting events," says Gene Logsdon, "scream and stomp in ludicrous animal ecstasy of thought-obliterating noise"). Important societal issues are raised, however, including choices that must be made about computer technology, the global economy, agriculture, health care, public education and environmental impact. And the beauty of some of the writing, especially in Wendell Berry's "Health Is Membership" and Bill McKibben's foreword, elevates the book, allowing it ultimately to issue a provocative, if ill-couched, challenge to us all. Editor, Ginny Faber; agent, Victoria Shoemaker.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
Plain, a hand-produced magazine for Quaker, Amish, and Luddite communities, provides an ongoing forum for thinking about how to break away from such distractions of modern life as materialism, invasive technology, and corporate thinking to make both a satisfying living and a life within a "real community and a culture of spiritual maturity." These essays from the magazine, gathered by Plain editor Savage, approach subjects like home schooling, bartering, and local self-sufficiency. Introducing a section called "Unplugging the Media," Savage relates how a farmer, using the television as an example, described being Amish as being willing to give up things when they aren't good for us spiritually. Interestingly, all the essayists have taken steps toward living their ideals, from quitting a corporate job to starting a garden, and relate their experiences with honesty and often with humor. Of interest to public, academic, and religious libraries.?Nancy Shires, East Carolina Univ., Greenville, NC
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.