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Paperback House of Rain: Tracking a Vanished Civilization Across the American Southwest Book

ISBN: 0316067547

ISBN13: 9780316067546

House of Rain: Tracking a Vanished Civilization Across the American Southwest

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Book Overview

A "beautifully written travelogue" that draws on the latest scholarly research as well as a lifetime of exploration to light on the extraordinary Anasazi culture of the American Southwest (Entertainment Weekly).

The greatest "unsolved mystery" of the American Southwest is the fate of the Anasazi, the native peoples who in the eleventh century converged on Chaco Canyon (in today's southwestern New Mexico) and built what has been...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Childs has done it with this book...

It's been a long time since I was thoroughly captivated by a book but House Of Rain has managed to do just that. Craig Childs is arguably one of the finest non-fiction writers today. For those of us who live and breathe the Great Southwest, Child's descriptions will bring back vivid memories of Sleeping Ute mountain in the distance and standing where the Ancients stood at Mesa Verde, Hovenweep, and Chaco. For those reviewers who felt like they needed maps and an answer, you can get maps at the visitor centers all bound up in glossy little books with equally glossy descriptions of people and places. This is not one of those books - it's so much deeper. This book is not a souvenier, it's a vehicle that takes you to places that a relative few will ever see and even less will understand. Sometimes, there is no final answer - there's just the lingering questions. That's part of what makes it so interesting.

Well-Researched and Well-Written Tour de Force

Craig Childs has written the book I've been waiting for, and he's mostly done a damn good job of it. (Kinda wish I'd written it myself...!) The intense, intensive, and fascinating amount of research he conducted, primarily by tramping through the U.S. Southwest and the Mexican northwest, as well as meeting with highly-informed people all along the way who sometimes posited their own theories and stories, is revealed in a slow, leisurely manner--not unlike, one suspects, the manner of the eventual movement of the people he tracked. An unhurried, deeply appreciative perspective of the land is brought almost trancelike to the reader; like Childs, we are pulled into the rhythms of living and traveling within the dictates of the very geography that defined the culture(s) he studied. I have lived in the Southwest since 1999 and have explored many a ruin myself. The absolute reverence he displays toward the remains of the people, their belongings, and their architecture is something I agree with, and I am pleased that he shares this respect in his book. Thank you, Mr. Childs, for further propagating the idea that these ancient artifacts are, if so desired, to be sought, admired, photographed, gingerly handled--and then left in place for either the next explorer or the winds and the sands. If only every explorer felt the same, there would be a heck of a lot more out there to see. I wavered on appointing 4 or 5 stars. The reason is that I was distracted, during the first few hundred pages (yes, this is solid 445-page tome), by Childs' meandering reveries that did sometimes confuse as to who, what, where, and when. But by the time I was well in the 300s, I got over it and surrendered to the lazy style, as I realized that it was reminiscent of the places he was wandering. His writing style emulates, I believe, the pace of life he and others think the ancient ones might have led. Having lived and traveled extensively on that same land myself (primarily in Utah), I completely understand and concur. For the serious buff, the neophyte archeologist, or the newbie to the scene of the Anasazi/ancestral Puebloans/ancient ones/pick your name, *House of Rain* is a well-detailed foray into that world. Colorful macaws, turkeys (the wild descendants of which still roam those areas), human sacrifice, war, peace, wildly intricate pottery, art, cannibalism, worshipping rain gods, culture clashes, the relativity of architecture and movement to the evolvement of the people--all those aspects, and more, fill Childs' pages. Far from a dry, academic treatment, this book allows the people and their culture to spring to life--even if some of it is still speculation. Some of his theories are utterly gripping and cause the mind spin with possibilities (mine did, at least). And they make a lot of sense. Whether or not "science" will ever back him up remains to be seen--and, as one other reviewer said, archeologists don't generally allow much soul into their theories, do they? I'

Outstanding Work

This is one of the best books written on the native peoples of the Southwest. Childs uses his travels, his inquisitiveness and imagination to write a plausable history of the Anasazi... tracing their exodus from Chaco and the Colorado Plateau south into Mexico. An academic could never leap to the conclusions that Childs postulates, however most archeological papers don't touch the soul. Child's book does. He brings the Anasazi back to life and paints their culture with a colorful brush. I'll never look at an Anasazi ruin in the same way again.

Amazing Trails

Craig Childs is an amazing writer. Each time I take up my copy of HOUSE OF RAIN I eagerly anticipate another view into the ancient Anasazi culture through Childs' eyes. HOUSE is Childs' personal record of his trek across the lands of the Anasazis. Childs is an attentive observer. He mainained a journal of his observations, his feelings, his speculations. HOUSE OF RAIN reads like a cleaned up edition of Childs' personal journals as he treks through arid arroyos or walks like "an angel of death" through a rare desert drenching downpour. His self-deprecating humor tickled my funny bone when Childs describes his dash across a suburban landscape in his boxer shorts, facing down two friendly and slobbering dogs. Childs' research leg work is extensive. Interjected aomng the details of his journey, Childs provides insights about the Anasazi world with startling finds by archaeologists, paleonlogists, geologists, physical surveyors, native peoples, and USA Park Service people. Childs' language and word images are as finely sculptured as the wind and water erroded desert landscape and arroyo walls. HOUSE OF RAIN is a must read book for students of paleo-America and tellers of American tales. Childs' greatest contribution may be that he affirms that the myserious ancient ruins spread across the US Southwest are more than tourist picture ops; rather they are remnants of real people grinding corn, doing house hold chores, laboring to build roads and places of worship, eking out a living in a hard land. In the end, Childs causes a readers to acknowledge that those ancient peoples are us.

Tracking the Ghosts of a Lost Civilization in the American Southwest

Craig Childs, who has spent a lifetime exploring the hidden corners of the American Southwest for even the faintest signs of water, adventure, and discovery in his previous books such as The Secret Knowledge of Water, Soul of Nowhere, and The Way Out, has turned his keen senses and ever inquisitive spirit in search of the secrets to what happened to the ancient Anasazi (or Ancestral Puebloans) of the region. Through his reading of scholarly sources and history, seeking out of oral histories and traditions, and hundreds of miles of walking the landscape in search of clues, Craig Childs has turned his considerable talents for reading the landscape and turning his observations into wonderful prose towards the mystery of what happened to the Anasazi of 800 to 1000 years ago. He has canvassed the region, including Northern Mexico, to find out how this ancient civilization converged on places like Chaco Canyon and Mesa Verde, where its culture thrived and flourished. And why these hubs of civilization dried up and its people seemingly scattered into the wind. House of Rain isn't about finding definitive answers to the questions concerning these ancient peoples - the details we may never know; instead, this book is about the discovery and exploration of the mysteries of those who came before us on this land. We seek out these ancient civilizations because we hope, no we believe that through the journey of discovery we will find a piece of ourselves...and then maybe the answers we hope will help us in our future. >>>>>>><<<<<<< <br /> <br />A Guide to my Book Rating System: <br /> <br />1 star = The wood pulp would have been better utilized as toilet paper. <br />2 stars = Don't bother, clean your bathroom instead. <br />3 stars = Wasn't a waste of time, but it was time wasted. <br />4 stars = Good book, but not life altering. <br />5 stars = This book changed my world in at least some small way.
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