ISBN: 1-58939-941-2, $13.95, softcover, 160 pages
In "A Fine Smirr of Rain," poet and essayist William Bridges
explores life and the natural world through the lens of rain. Starting
from the question "How long has it been raining?" he describes the
world's oldest rock and its evidence of water 4.4 billion years ago.
From the sound, shape, and smell of rain, he moves on to "Death by
Umbrella" -the rain-related assassinations of a Napoleonic finance
minister and (possibly) JFK. Before the book ends, Bridges has touched
on rain in literature, Earth's wettest and driest spots, the destruction
of rain forests, global warming, and ice-coring in Antarctica. The book
concludes with a meditation on the beauty and transience of the world.
Bridges is a storyteller, whose work has been called "beautifully
crafted" and "never far removed from the daily course of things."
Susanna Rich, author of writing textbooks, calls him "by far the most
versatile writer I know."
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
William Bridges has had a career divided among active
journalism, teaching, and writing/editing. He has been a foreign
correspondent in Germany and a newspaper editor in the U.S. and Taiwan.
He is also a poet, whose 30-year collection, The Landscape Deeper In,
was published by Virtual Bookworm. He has written two memoirs, Under the
Heaven Tree and Five-Mountain Morning. Bridges taught journalism and
English for many years at Franklin College in Indiana. He now does
freelance editing and fact-checking, including work on an international
education journal, a book on corporate blogging, and books on technical
computing subjects. He and his wife, Karen Petersen Bridges, live in
Franklin, Indiana.