Welcome to the real
Katie Lee Web Site
Reviews for:
Glen Canyon Betrayed: A Sensuous Elegy
&
Love Song to Glen Canyon
Book info:
Glen Canyon Betrayed: A Sensuous Elegy
by Katie Lee
Published by Fretwater Press (Flagstaff, AZ), 2006
$16.95 * 296 pages * Trade Paperback
To order, go to www.fretwater.com (credit cards accepted), or order from Katie (with check or money order),
autographed & postpaid for $20.00, katydid@katydoodit.com OR... go to my online store.
DVD info:
Love Song to Glen Canyon
Produced by Katie Lee - Katydid Books & Music, 2007
$20.00 postpaid * 30 minutes
To order, email braddimock@fretwater.com (credit cards accepted), or order from Katie (with check or money order),
autographed & postpaid for $20.00, katydid@katydoodit.com OR... go to my online store.
Fifty years ago,
Hollywood starlet Katie Lee fell hopelessly in love with Glen Canyon. Then
followed the dam, the drowning of the river, and Katie's reservoir of grief. Yet,
a passionate activism was born out of this loss, and now Katie continues to
fight for the Glen's resurrection well into her ninth decade.
Katie's latest efforts -
the DVD Love Song to Glen Canyon,
and the book Glen Canyon Betrayed: A Sensuous Elegy - are a testament to the power of love, loss and
hope, even after 40 years.
Love Song to Glen Canyon is a half-hour journey through the ten magical years Katie enjoyed running the
Glen before this idyllic and beloved landscape was drowned. The viewer runs the
emotional rapids of 140 largely unpublished photos set to Katie's narrative and
heartfelt music. The DVD is raw, stripped of pretense. The emotion in Katie's
voice is authentic and moving.
In the final song on the DVD, "The River Dies," the
magnitude of what's been lost is readily apparent, even to those who never knew
Glen Canyon as it once was. Katie guides us through photos of the Escalante and
San Juan Rivers, Mystery and Lost Eden Canyons. We see them through the eyes of
her love - pre-dam - and then through the eyes of her loss - post-flood. The
song and images are equally painful. At song's end, Katie looks into the
camera, and in one heart-wrenching moment, we know the true depth of her grief.
In the end, Love Song is not a monumental work of cinematography. It is simple - images flashing across
the screen, a voice taking us through song and story - but in its simplicity
and brevity lies its beauty. It is an authentic work of the heart.
Equally authentic and
heartfelt is the DVD's companion piece, Glen Canyon Betrayed. Originally released in 1998 as All My Rivers
Are Gone, the new incarnation is
re-edited, redesigned, indexed, with new photos and an afterword. Although the
book may seem old news to Katie Lee devotees, it is perfect timing for the
work's rebirth and reintroduction, just as nature is gifting the Glen with the
same.
In the book's new
afterword, Katie acknowledges that the canyon's reemergence is a complicated
issue in this adventure-obsessed age, and an entirely different approach is
needed if we are to avoid ruining it anew. Her perspective strikes at the root
of the problem: "What really needs changing is us - not the canyons, not the legal status or
accessibility, but us."
Though readers will find some pointed criticism of current land
management policies, today's hordes of irreverent thrill-seekers, and the
"Wreck-the-Nation Bureau," the book is largely a meditation on happier times
along the Glen. It is a sweetly intoxicating read.
Glen Canyon Betrayed chronicles Katie's love affair with the canyon in exquisite detail, through
journal notes, memory, and song. In a way, the book is a revival of a lost oral
tradition, connecting many of us - through the lens of one woman's love - to a
canyon we never knew, bringing its lessons to the surface. Katie recounts
places before place-names and adventures before guidebooks - a world before
everything came within easy reach of cell phones and satellites. She teaches us
the importance of the mysteries we are quickly losing.
Katie writes, "If
our need to know - to get to the end of
every side canyon - had outstripped our desire to wonder and be amazed, we'd have left the Glen with no pounding heart for that place, and
less desire to return and find out more."
Love Song to Glen Canyon and Glen Canyon Betrayed are
complimentary works, each lending light and vibrancy to the other. Together,
they help resurrect the beating heart of the Glen, if only momentarily through
memory, music and image.
Finally, perhaps the greatest message Katie leaves us with
is this: "Let me urge you (no
matter the odds) to seek out such a place. Why? Because you need it, whether you know it or not.... Keep it as long
as possible and, like a loved one, cherish it, being aware that love is also
pain, discovery, joy unrealized and - sooner or later - loss."
Katie's eloquent anger, her bedrock grief, her ever-present
passion and sense of loss’Ķthis is our invitation and inspiration to take a risk - damn the consequences - and love so hard it hurts.
Review of Love Song to Glen Canyon, a DVD from Katie Lee
645 words
Katie Lee has been writing love songs to Glen Canyon for
more than 40 years. Her books and music over the decades are a loving elegy to a
lost place. And with her newest work, a DVD titled Love Song to Glen Canyon, the grief and longing of a lifetime are collected
in one sweet and sorrowful space.
Love Song to Glen Canyon is a half-hour journey through the ten magical years Katie enjoyed running the
Glen before the dam was erected in 1963 and an idyllic and beloved landscape
was drowned. Katie says that this time and place changed her life, bringing her
an understanding of self and human limitation. From Glen Canyon, she learned
"time is not my enemy."
Now in her upper-eighties, Katie seems to have made friends
with time, retaining her feisty, spitfire nature and her commitment to the
restoration of Glen Canyon. Her new DVD is just one facet of her unremitting
activism and dedication to place.
Love Song is a
collection of 140 largely unpublished photos set to Katie"s narrative and
music. Despite her Hollywood background as a singer and actress, this
performance is not a bow to showbiz. Nor is this the cussin" and carousin"
Katie we know from Sandstone Seduction. Instead, the DVD is raw, stripped of pretense. The emotion in Katie"s
voice is authentic and moving.
In the final song on the DVD, "The River Dies," the
magnitude of what"s been lost is readily apparent, even to those who never knew
Glen Canyon as it once was. Katie guides us through photos of the Escalante and
San Juan Rivers, Mystery and Lost Eden Canyons. We see them through the eyes of
her love - pre-dam - and then through the eyes of her loss - post-flood. The
song and images are equally painful. At song"s end, Katie looks into the
camera, and in one heart-wrenching moment, we know that her sense of loss
outstrips ours by unfathomable degrees.
However, Love Song is
mostly a meditation on happier times along the Glen. It takes us on a journey
through the 185 river miles and 125 side canyons now underwater. We see photos
of rock art and ruins, potholes and patinated walls - places now only living in
photos and breathing in memory. As Katie sings, "The only way to see it is to
slowly close your eyes."
In a way, Love Song is a revival of a lost oral tradition. It has the feel of campfire stories and
songs as shared by an elder. It is an intimate encounter with the seemingly
long-ago.
It is also a history, a look back at a quieter time in this
redrock region and a more perfect time in Katie"s life. Although the DVD brings
us a toned-down Katie Lee and puts Glen Canyon at center stage, the woman
ultimately becomes more accessible than the canyon - through her grief, her
nostalgia, and the ever-present umbilicus connecting her to nurturing ground.
As Katie says, the Glen provided "time to find out who you
really are, not someone else"s idea of you." And through her recounting of the
Glen as it was, we also get a glimpse into the true Ms. Lee: a woman whose
memories - and public image - stand larger than life.
In the end, Love Song is not a monumental work of cinematography. It is simple - images flashing
across the screen, a voice taking us through song and story - but in its
simplicity and brevity lies its beauty. It is an authentic work of the heart.
Love Song to Glen Canyon is a journey on the waves of Katie"s eloquent anger, the bedrock of her grief,
and her ongoing nostalgia for her canyon. But by film"s end, the viewer is not
left with sadness; rather, one hopes to know such peace and communion with a
landscape as Katie Lee has - if only once and nevermore.