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Excerpt:
...You see Salvation Mountain before you know what you're
looking at. The northern end of a long, low, buffcolored
bluff shines out a surprising white in the harsh desert
sunlight. You drive closer and you begin to make out
a patchwork of brilliant colors that are interworked
with the white highlights and dominate over them. You
see the big red heart and the 'God is Love' and the
cross on the top made out of telephone poles. You turn
off the blacktop and bump over a culvert and pull to
a stop on the flat desert floor. Salvation Mountain
rises in front of you. To your right is an old truck
with a gable-roofed wooden house built on back. The
truck and the house are decorated in the same brilliant
style as the mountain. Later on you'll Look at the details,
the intertwined rows of flowers, the soaring doves of
peace. You get out of Your car and the fiery heat hits
you full blast. You look for Leonard Knight. Maybe he's
inside his house on the truck. Maybe he's at work on
his mountain.
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I first heard about Leonard Knight in July of 1994.
An article in the Los Angeles Times told about a man
who had spent ten years painting religious slogans on
a mountain in the desert. Now the local authorities
had declared the mountain 'a toxic nightmare' and were
making plans to bulldoze it down and take it away in
trucks to a toxic waste dump in Nevada. I decided to
go see it before they carried it off.
My first quick impression of Salvation Mountain was
one of garishness. Then I took out my camera and walked
closer and started looking at it.
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