Home :: Books :: Reference  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference

Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
A Trail Through Leaves: The Journal as a Path to Place

A Trail Through Leaves: The Journal as a Path to Place

List Price: $17.95
Your Price: $12.21
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A beautiful book--inspirational and instructional
Review: For those of us attempting to cut through the clutter of busy urban life, this book is a beautiful reminder of how to use close, patient observation of what's around us to enhance our enjoyment of life. Hannah Hinchman even includes practical tips for equipping yourself with thetools of a field artist. After reading two chapters, I bought three pencils and a sketch pad and went to a local park to find something to draw. I hadn't seriously drawn anything in twenty some years, but her book reminded me of how important excursions into the woods had been whento me when I was young. A Trail Through Leaves made my eyes hungry to observe quirky insects and plants, and my hand itchy to draw again. The hardcover book is beautifully printed and laid out and feels good in your hands. It's not a "can't put it down" read--it's a book to dip into and go back to. For animal lovers, it should be noted that Hannah Hinchman's love for horses and cats is contagious; her respect for them and sense of wonder about her connection to them are commmunicated through her sketches and her writing.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Now I find passion for the thread waisted wasp...
Review: Having briefly met the author and once lived in the geographical area the book was written, I'm quite biased, but I find this a fascinating piece of literature. Whether exploring the shady side of a mountain or traversing a city street, Hannah records her life every step of the way. Her observations are astute and profound, her drawings astonishingly detailed and thorough. She has the knack of soaring you into flight, propelling you underwater, or delicately placing you inside a fragile blossom. This is more of a dabble and browse book, and it's wonderful if you just want to look at the pictures. Journalists, authors, artists, or anyone who wants to bring more focus and an appreciation for the art of paying attention into their life will find this book a creative revolution.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Somewhat dissapointing
Review: Having kept journals since I was a kid, I thought this book might help to renew my passion for the activity and inspire me to see new things. The premise of the book seemed perfect: the journal as a path to place. But be forewarned: this book is not a manual for how to explore the world around you or examine your life through journaling. It is a wordy autobiography of one woman and the techniques that work for her. The first chapter is nothing but an exhaustive summary of her own life and the journals she kept; the second rambles on and on about the differences in ball-point pens and small art brushes, all described through the experiences of the author: "I like the Bic much better than the heavy, pretentious Mont Blanc ballpoint pen that my friend found in the street. It's unbalanced, and the tip is stingy and stiff. But the Mont Blac fountain pen - there is a truely loveable tool."

Reading this book, I can't help but feel that it is a forged account of being true to oneself. Each illustration, supposedly taken from the author's journals, is picture-perfect and ready to be hung on the wall. Any written text that accompanies it is painstakingly neat and labored. There isn't a visual hint of imperfection anywhere, and it makes the book seem commercial and not very real.

This book does have several good points: it has some very good lessons on art technique and it does hold some very thought-provolking observations amidst the flowery language and self-absorbed babbling. But if you're like me and looking for a book to help you dive below the surface of perfectionistic drawings and whimsical, unobtrusive text, look elsewhere.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Overwrought
Review: Hinchman writes about her own experiences about journaling why she continues to write and draw in them. She breaks the book down into different parts of journaling at the end of each chapter she has a few pages of activities that you can use in your own journaling. But the book isn't preachy she talks about journaling from her point of view. What makes the book so beautiful is that it is filled with excerpts from her own journals over the years, both drawings and words. For me this book was especially good because it didn't tell you how to journal as if it was some set of instructions. Instead she, as in the title, led me down a trail.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Beautiful and full of good ideas
Review: Hinchman writes about her own experiences about journaling why she continues to write and draw in them. She breaks the book down into different parts of journaling at the end of each chapter she has a few pages of activities that you can use in your own journaling. But the book isn't preachy she talks about journaling from her point of view. What makes the book so beautiful is that it is filled with excerpts from her own journals over the years, both drawings and words. For me this book was especially good because it didn't tell you how to journal as if it was some set of instructions. Instead she, as in the title, led me down a trail.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: It's a great gift for the creative people in your life...
Review: I bought this book for my brother, Jamie, the artist. He always sees the subtle, gentle, spiritual side of things, the same way Ms. Hinchman does. I know it'll be a great inspiration to him to keep on doing what he does so naturally.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: such potential....such bias
Review: If you are a biologist or scientist who also does art, this book may be as offensive to you as it was to me. This person presents an approach to 'seeing' which she suggests is the only true way to see. She gives extensive examples of how blind biologists/scientists are to the world. Her pretention only uncovers her own ignorance. I had such high hopes for this book. I had hoped to improve my field sketching skills. The only information I got from this book was an updated list of supplies. No useful technique information. Quite a bit of quirky annoying dogma.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Beautiful introduction to visual diary-keeping
Review: In my 15 years of keeping a diary, I spent the first 10 keeping a conventional written record of thoughts, ideas, and occurances. But about 5 years ago my diary keeping received a pleasant and unexpected jolt when I encountered Hannah Hinchman's 'A Trail Through Leaves: The Journal as a Path to Place'. This beautifully written and illustrated book on keeping a visual diary completely enlarged my ideas of what a diary could be: a visual record as well as a meditation on the material universe.

Rating: 0 stars
Summary: This book is among the greatest joys of my editorial career
Review: In the jaded, "we've seen it all" world of publishing, it's rare to be able to say "this book changed my life." But Hannah's work really does enable you to see differently; the more time I spent with her book, the more I began to notice things I'd never seen before, like the shapes of tree branches in Bryant Park or the way lichen can become flourescent white after a rain. Even for an urban dweller with no time for journal-keeping, the vicarious experience of Hannah's ability to spend time just paying exquisite attention to the world around us is incredibly inspiring and nourishing. I wholeheartedly recommend this book for every journal-keeper, creative person, nature lover, or just plain exhausted-by-everything-and-in-need-of-sustenance person you know.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Overwrought
Review: The author favors an elaborate, self-conscious type of writing. Put bluntly, her prose is frequently purple. The drawing and writing lack the spontaneity that would be expected in genuine journal excerpts. The overall artwork is quite poor--flat, tentative drawings and watercolor pieces with mushy brushwork that leave the images feeling overworked and without any sense of weight.


<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates