Plan to spend some time with this short book: the content is fascinating, but the prose is supreme. Belleville writes with grace, precision, melody, and rhythm, and you just can't read him fast. I haven't read his other works, so maybe he always write with such rhapsodic cadence, but I choose to think that his writing here reflects his subject. The St. Johns River is the longest in Florida, and like the rest of the state it's unlike its peers elsewhere in the United States. This river rises out of swamps and springs, collecting filtered rainfall and adding millions and millions of gallons from dozens of springs throughout central Florida. It meanders and backtracks, hosting plentiful and often unique animals and lush plants found nowhere else in the States. It shaped the state's early culture, both the crackers who lived off the river and on it, as well as the Northern rich who came down to enjoy the climate that enveloped it.
Birds and gators populate this book, and so do humans, those of today and those of historic Florida and of prehistoric too. Belleville weaves a melodious fascinating story of interconnectedness between man and nature, often rapacious, portraying a Florida much different from the state we think we know.
Plan to savor this rich offering with joy.