Home Again: Essays and Memoirs from Indiana
Book Details
Description
What it means today to make a home in the nineteenth state is examined in the Indiana Historical Society Press’s collection Home Again: Essays and Memoirs from Indiana. Editors Tom Watson and Jim McGarrah have brought together some of the state’s finest writers to reflect on such themes as family, security, and, as the editors noted, "quests for a better life, a life rooted in Indiana."
"Perhaps this state is to the United States what the heart is to the body," the editors note in the book’s introduction. "Everything that is the essence of what keeps us alive flows to and from this center, drawn in and pumped out to replenish and reinvigorate all the other parts."
The book includes essays from such well-known Hoosier literary figures as Kurt Vonnegut, Scott Russell Sanders, Susan Neville, Michael Martone, and David Hoppe. The many different meanings of "home" are examined in the book, including Alyce Miller discussing her attempts to become a Hoosier after having moved to Indiana from California, and Michele Gondi finding a place in the community of Mount Vernon after moving from her native Argentina.
The tone of the essays collected in Home Again range from the pastoral, as in Scott Saalman’s account of his work with his grandfather in "Cider Days," to humorous yet scholarly, as in Rick Farrant’s examination of the history of the name for Indiana residents, "Hunting for Hoosiers." Other essays explore such subjects as the Amish, hardware stores, lakes, Bobby Knight, unlocked doors, and urban sprawl.
