The
Missouri Ozarks is a distinct region within the state of Missouri, yet
geographically indistinguishable from the Arkansas Ozarks. It presents
distinctly different faces, depending upon what one is looking for: the
entertainment complex of Branson (and upscale resort at Big Cedar); the natural
beauty of the hills, small mountains, rivers and streams; St. Louisans’
favorite weekend resorts at Lake of the Ozarks; the rural, backwoods movie
setting of “Winter Bone;” the Ozarks of the Baldknobbers legend and
Harold Bell Wright’s “Shepherd of the
Hills.”
Behind
the legends, entertainment extravaganzas, resorts is the region that tens of
thousands call home, where they live, work, get married, raise families and
die, much like any other part of the United States. This is the territory of
farms and small towns (Springfield, Mo., population of 162,000, would likely be
the unofficial capital). Away from the glitz of the Branson Strip, it’s an area
of rugged, stark beauty; I even have two photographs from the region on the
walls of my office at work.
To continue reading, please see my post
today at Tweetspeak Poetry.
Photograph by George Hodan via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
1 comment:
over to ts then..
happy new year, Mr. Young.
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