The View from My Ridge
Essays and stories by
Charles E. Rice
Dimensions: Softcover, 5.5 x
8.5, 192 pages
The cost is
$9.98 per copy
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Canopic Publishing
357 2nd Ave #3
Bridgeville, PA 15017
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From the back cover: Those of us who knew Charles Rice as friend and priest give thanks for this renewal of old times not forgotten. Those who knew him not at all will exult in the wit and wisdom of a new associate, teacher and playmate. —Will D. Campbell In The View from My Ridge, Charles E. Rice creates short, wonderfully perceptive, lyrical vignettes in the rich story telling tradition of Sandra Cisneros’s The House on Mango Street. Sometimes profound, always moving, these essays by Rice are beautifully crafted. Their intricate designs, almost always completed on one page, reveal the skill of an extraordinary writer. Here is a memoir whose form and style, plus the profundity of its meaning, make it a worthwhile and important read. —Mary Sue Koeppel, author of In the Library of Silences, Poems of Loss; editor of Kalliope Born in the John Ross House in Rossville, Georgia, Charles E. Rice lived most of his boyhood at the foot of Missionary Ridge on the Tennessee-Georgia state line. Steeped in Cherokee culture and Civil War history, this area becomes a central metaphor in Rice’s much-travelled life, a life touched by the Great Depression, tempered by World War II, and challenged by the revolutions that shaped postwar America. Through it all, Rice struggles to find an enduring truth greater than the shifting values of the society he so ably served. —Robert B. Gentry, author of Insights into Love and Freedom and A College Tells Its Story |
Read the Preface by Phil Rice
Selected Excerpts from the book:

The frontispiece of The View From My Ridge is Cesar Biojo's beautiful specially-commissioned rendering of the John Ross House, a house whose storied history includes being the home of Chief John Ross, great Chief of the Cherokees at the time of the "Trail of Tears;" the headquarters for General Hooker during the Battle of Chickamauga; and, in 1929, the birthplace of Charles E. Rice.