For over twenty years, John Hanson Mitchell has visited Beaver Brook
almost daily. This small, slow-flowing Massachusetts stream was of vital
importance for early settlers and an indispensable resource for the
Native peoples who lived and fished along its shores, but it has been
largely forgotten in our own time. Revisiting the river's oxbows, bends,
and marshes over the course of a year, Legends of the Common Stream
combines a natural history of Beaver Brook with a study of the people
who lived on this land and a meandering, but stunning, examination of
the myths and legends that can help us to better understand humanity's
relationship to the natural world.
While Mitchell never leaves the brook's shores, he draws from a range of
traditions and takes readers on excursions to regions and cultures
across the globe and across time, making the case that our contemporary
separation from nature goes hand in hand with our alienation from the
world of myth. This book seeks to restore these broken relationships and
offers the reminder that while cultures may come and go, the stream goes
on forever.