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Yellow Pine by Harrison Miller

Yellow Pine by Harrison Miller

On Rays and Grain

Find more underlife editions books here

The work collected here was shaped in the long aftermath of a summer storm that swept through East Tennessee—one of those swollen, flash-heavy Knoxville summers that tears through old growth and leaves the land stunned and blown open. Harrison Miller returned to that wreckage with his father, logging what was left: dogwoods torn at the root, pine trunks twisted mid-fall, oaks cracked but still holding on. Nothing imported. All of it born from the ridge.

The labor is physical—loud with saws, heavy with limbs—but the attention in these pages turns inward, toward what the wood reveals under the blade. Rays in the oak, thin as veins, cut across the grain. They run from the heartwood out, tracing the way pressure moves through a life. Miller doesn’t speak of metaphor, but the connection is there: in the way his father teaches him to judge weight by feel, to stretch the job when the money’s thin, to carry both craft and compromise in the same motion.

These pieces aren’t romantic. They’re stained with sap, marked by hunger, stripped of ornament. But inside that stripped-down landscape—mud-churned fields, sweating machines, overgrown lots—something essential holds. Grain patterns as memory. Medullary rays as a record of stress. The cut as a kind of inheritance.

This is not work about trees. It’s work about what trees carry. And what remains, once they’ve fallen.

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Yellow Pine by Harrison Miller

$79.64

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Yellow Pine by Harrison Miller

On Rays and Grain

Find more underlife editions books here

The work collected here was shaped in the long aftermath of a summer storm that swept through East Tennessee—one of those swollen, flash-heavy Knoxville summers that tears through old growth and leaves the land stunned and blown open. Harrison Miller returned to that wreckage with his father, logging what was left: dogwoods torn at the root, pine trunks twisted mid-fall, oaks cracked but still holding on. Nothing imported. All of it born from the ridge.

The labor is physical—loud with saws, heavy with limbs—but the attention in these pages turns inward, toward what the wood reveals under the blade. Rays in the oak, thin as veins, cut across the grain. They run from the heartwood out, tracing the way pressure moves through a life. Miller doesn’t speak of metaphor, but the connection is there: in the way his father teaches him to judge weight by feel, to stretch the job when the money’s thin, to carry both craft and compromise in the same motion.

These pieces aren’t romantic. They’re stained with sap, marked by hunger, stripped of ornament. But inside that stripped-down landscape—mud-churned fields, sweating machines, overgrown lots—something essential holds. Grain patterns as memory. Medullary rays as a record of stress. The cut as a kind of inheritance.

This is not work about trees. It’s work about what trees carry. And what remains, once they’ve fallen.

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On Rays and Grain

Find more underlife editions books here

The work collected here was shaped in the long aftermath of a summer storm that swept through East Tennessee—one of those swollen, flash-heavy Knoxville summers that tears through old growth and leaves the land stunned and blown open. Harrison Miller returned to that wreckage with his father, logging what was left: dogwoods torn at the root, pine trunks twisted mid-fall, oaks cracked but still holding on. Nothing imported. All of it born from the ridge.

The labor is physical—loud with saws, heavy with limbs—but the attention in these pages turns inward, toward what the wood reveals under the blade. Rays in the oak, thin as veins, cut across the grain. They run from the heartwood out, tracing the way pressure moves through a life. Miller doesn’t speak of metaphor, but the connection is there: in the way his father teaches him to judge weight by feel, to stretch the job when the money’s thin, to carry both craft and compromise in the same motion.

These pieces aren’t romantic. They’re stained with sap, marked by hunger, stripped of ornament. But inside that stripped-down landscape—mud-churned fields, sweating machines, overgrown lots—something essential holds. Grain patterns as memory. Medullary rays as a record of stress. The cut as a kind of inheritance.

This is not work about trees. It’s work about what trees carry. And what remains, once they’ve fallen.