In his introduction, Peter Miller declares of the Great Plains: This is a metaphysical land. By the time both he and his reader, however, make their way through the visual and literary territory covered in this. handsome volume, the Great Plains come to seem far less metaphysical and far more problematical a place. While Miller reinforces some of the traditional mythology of the Plains in his complementary texts and photographs-the elemental and inherent freedom of Plains life, the stubborn resilience of its people, the soul that resides in geography-he also explores the contradictions that have come in time to trouble and radically alter the character of the region. What Miller intends in this book is an extended portrait of a landscape ...