Greetings, dear Readers,
It gives me great pleasure to announce the publication of my new book. Here is the catalog entry by Edition Axel Menges at axelmenges.de:
Champagne Regained
U.S. Publication date: mid-November 2012
Within the last millennium France’s Champagne region has
ascended two stunning pinnacles of fame and fortune with a long, deep gorge
between them. In this book Jacqueline
Widmar Stewart traces the history and culture of its highly varied past to its
remarkable present. More than 100 color
photographs provide a visual perspective, especially to events and occurrences
tied with specific locales.
The beauty of Champagne’s medieval buildings evidence a time
of great opulence and artistry. Today
the bustle and vigor of the area’s hubs attest to the immense success of the
modern champagne trade. Generally
speaking, however, less attention tends to focus on the tenor of the times
between two eras. Undeniably the deleterious
effects from the periods that followed Champagne’s medieval golden age render
recent accomplishments all the more impressive.
Nothing less than a tornado of ill winds swept the
northeastern zone of France from its esteemed position in Europe and plunged it
into fate’s dark abyss where it remained for hundreds for years while
misfortune reigned. The rebound of the
Champagne region has come from a most improbable place with an even less likely
cast of characters responsible for its immense successes.
The elegance, the exuberance, the mystique – elements now
synonymous with champagne – developed through the union of art and craft with
science and savvy. Additionally, the
process of champagne making - including the types of grapes, the terroirs, the
crus, the development of the appellation system and other factors necessary for
the designation “champagne” to be used on the label - are discussed in the
book. The author also looks at two
regional parks in today’s Champagne region and the important, continuing role
they play in the look, feel and function of the area.
Since high-school days in Indiana, French language and
literature have held a fascination for Jacqueline Widmar Stewart, who studied
at the University of Colorado as an undergraduate, gained her Master of Arts
degree in French at the University of Michigan and earned her Juris Doctorate
at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California.
All of the author’s books celebrate triumphs in conservation.
In 2011 Edition Axel Menges issued her third book, Parks and Gardens in Greater Paris.
Her second book Finding Slovenia:
A Guide to Old Europe’s New Country, published by Mladinska knjiga in
Ljubljana, concerns the history and culture of her grandparents’ homeland. Her first, The Glaciers’ Treasure Trove: A
Field Guide to the Lake Michigan Riviera, explores the geologic and
philanthropic history of the five parks at the southern tip of Lake Michigan
near Chicago, including the National Lakeshore.
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