Uncle Dave's Books of The Big Outside: September 2007 Edition
Uncle Dave's Books of The Big Outside: September 2007 Edition
Uncle Dave's Books of The Big Outside: September 2007 Edition
others as I learn about them. For now, Im merely adding the title,
author, and publisher for recent books. Ill write reviews for these
books as I can get to them. Have patience! It will take awhile. Also,
please note that many of the reviews of older books are pretty much
unchanged from 1995. I will slowly revise those. Please visit this site
every month or so to see what is new.
Please tell your friends, colleagues, students, or professors
about Books of the Big Outside. Mention it in your conservation
groups publications or website. This site is a free service of The
Rewilding Institute and our Rewilding Partners. If youd like to help
keep it going, click here to donate and become a Rewilding Partner.
Dave Foreman, Sandia Mountains Foothills
August 2007
Remember: this book list is for browsing! Pour a nice glass of wine,
lean back in your recliner or lawn chair, pet the cat on your lap next to
your laptop, andBrowse.
Index
History
Ecological History
Conservation History
Biography & Autobiography
Conservation
Extinction
Conservation Biology
Conservation General
Wildlife Protection
Wilderness
National Parks
Forestry
Rivers and Dams
Values
Land Ethic
Eco-Philosophy
Natural History
Fiction and Literature
Crisis
Population Explosion
Collapse
Human Nature
History
Ecological History
recent school of thought has brought profound revisions in our view of the
rise of Western Civilization and, indeed, of the development of
civilization. It is an approach long overdue. How peculiarly arrogant we
are to have written our history and left out all of the non-human players
except as a stage on which the drama of humankind occurs! Why do
irrigation-based societies from the Mesopotamians to the Hohokam
collapse? How was the brute Cortez with his small gang of thugs able to
overthrow one of the most powerful empires on Earth in a few short weeks?
How have Europeans managed to dominate the world? What have humans
done to change the face of the Earth? The past inability of history to
adequately address these questions lies in not asking the right questions, in
ignoring human ecology, in downplaying such simple actors as smallpox
and dirt. The books in this category tell a far wiser and more complete tale
than the history texts you studied in school. Henry Ford said, History is
bunk. It is indeed, if we ignore the land.
DESERTS ON THE MARCH by Paul B. Sears. Professor Sears
was a highly respected botanist and leading academic during the
middle of the last century. In this American conservation classic
(originally written in 1935), he asks the question, Is the human race
digging its own grave in North America? He discusses the
destruction of virgin prairie, the despoiling of natural waterways,
the hewing down of great forests, and the indiscriminate killing of
wildlife. Man has become the sponsor of a biological experiment
without known parallel in the history of the earth He no longer
accepts the pattern in which he finds himself, but has destroyed
that pattern and from the wreck is attempting to create a new one.
That, of course, is cataclysmic revolution. I read this book when I
was beginning my conservation career and it remains one of the
greatest influences on me. 256 pages, index, illustrations. Island
Press, 1988 (1935).
TOPSOIL & CIVILIZATION Revised Edition by Vernon Gill
Carter and Tom Dale. The jacket description reads, Civilized man
and civilization as we know it depend on the soil for nurture and
sustenance. Examining the broad sweep of human history, they
point out that civilizations rise and fall according to their use or
abuse of topsoil. In 1955, the authors, hailing from the Soil
Conservation Service and National Wildlife Federation, wrote this
landmark history of the world from the viewpoint of the soil. Topsoil
& Civilization opened the way for the ecological histories that have
come since. Updated in 1974, this is still a vital work; I know of no
other book that covers the subject so well or so fully. It is an
effective counter to traditional history that looks only at people and
not the stage on which they have played. Index, bibliography, black
& white photos, 292 pages. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman,
1974 (1955).
THE MARCH OF FOLLY: From Troy to Vietnam by Barbara
Tuchman. This great book by the intrepid historian Barbara
Tuchman is not overtly about conservation. But its thesis certainly
applies to how leaders make foolish decisions about conservation
and environmental issues. Using as prime examples the defeat of
Troy, the Protestant Reformation, the American Revolution, and the
Vietnam War, Tuchman argues that a leading factor in history is
folly: the pursuit by governments of policies contrary to their own
self-interests. Tuchman further defines folly as meeting three
criteria: being seen as counter-productive in its own time; a better
way is offered but rejected; and a group, not an individual, makes
the foolish choices. Whether it is global heating, overfishing,
population growth, or any of a myriad of other ecological crises,
todays governments and other institutions are guilty of the ultimate
folly. After reading The March of Folly, you will understand much
better why groups in control seem blind and mad today on
conservation issues. I dont think we can understand the past or the
present of humankind without acknowledging the weighty role of
folly. Persistence in error is the problem. Index, endnotes, 447
pages. Ballantine Books, New York, 1984.
BEYOND GEOGRAPHY: The Western Spirit Against the
Wilderness by Frederick Turner. The Atlantic Monthly says, Beyond
Geography is clearly a work of brilliance and imagination, a
compelling, disturbing, and uncommonly literate exploration of one
of mankind's most basic dilemmas. Turner has also been accused of
writing poetry for history. This genius has cut through layer upon
layer of rational irrationality and civilized historical myth to get to
the heart of the human relationship with the land. Beyond Geography
is a great work in every sense, and is necessary for anyone wishing
Donald Worster
UNDER WESTERN SKIES Nature and History in the
American West by Donald Worster. No one understands the
American West better than Donald Worster. He is also the top
ecological historian. Reading Under Western Skies is the best quick
way I know for someoneeven a historian, conservationist, and
native Westerner like meto better understand the American West.
Worster has rounded up some of his best insights in this collection
of essays, with titles like Beyond the Agrarian Myth, New West True
West, Cowboy Ecology, Hydraulic Society in California, Hoover
Dam: A Study in Domination, Freedom and Want: The Western
Paradox, Grassland Follies: Agricultural Capitalism on the Plains,
The Black Hills: Sacred or Profane?, Alaska: The Underworld
Erupts, Grounds for Identity, and A Country Without Secrets. If we
are to defend the wilderness of the West, we must understand what
the West is, historically and socially. Worster is the key. Index,
footnotes, 292 pages. Oxford University Press, 1992.
THE DUST BOWL: The Southern Plains in the 1930s by Donald
Worster. My momma lived through the Dust Bowl on a hardscrabble
pinto bean farm on the high plains of eastern New Mexico. When I
first read Dust Bowl many years ago, I gave it to ma. She read it and
said that it was all true. Worster goes far beyond merely recounting
the history of the Dust Bowl, however. He looks into its causes
primarily the attitudes Americans had toward the land. Ideas
caused the Dust Bowl, and Worster unfortunately finds these same
ideas alive and well in America today. Worster is the dean of
modern ecological history and one of today's most brilliant and
articulate writers. Oxford University Press.
THE ENDS OF THE EARTH: Perspectives on Modern
Environmental History edited by Donald Worster. This anthology
exemplifies the scope and importance of ecological history:
connections between climate and food supplies, demographic
pressures and technological innovation, and social change and
environment in pre-colonial Europe, and the impact of European
conquest on the ecosystems and peoples of the rest of the world. The
history you learned in school is a play without the stage or main
characters; this book begins the process of returning the stage and
the non-human leads. Contributors include Worster, Alfred Crosby,
and Raymond Dasmann. Index, bibliography, footnotes, some
charts, maps, and tables, 341 pages. Cambridge University Press,
1988.
WEALTH OF NATURE Environmental History and the
Ecological Imagination by Donald Worster. Worster collects here a
group of essays he terms as my own intellectual turning to the
land. In doing so, he turns his wise eye to the American
relationship to the land, the field of environmental history, Aldo
Leopold, agriculture, soil erosion, water development, sustainable
Conservation History
There are those in every activist generation who think they invented
the movement and who think that their accomplishments and travails are
unique. The more mature and thoughtful activist comes to recognize that
she is retracing the steps of those who came before, and that she can learn
much from the grand fights and obscure battles of yesteryear. These books
tell the story of the preservation cause and help us know those on whose
shoulders we stand.
THE AMERICAN CONSERVATION MOVEMENT: John
Muir and His Legacy by Stephen Fox. Both a history of the
conservation movement and an important biography of John Muir,
this book is crucial to understanding the conservation movement.
Fox's thesis is that the history of conservation can be told as the
ongoing struggle between passionate amateurs (John Muir) and
conservative resource professionals (Gifford Pinchot). Fox discusses
important fights within conservation groups, such as Rosalie Edge's
efforts to reform the National Audubon Society in the 1930s, and
spotlights little-known but important conservation leaders. I just
reread this book and was struck by how vital it is for todays
conservationists to read it in this era of professionalization and
institutionalization elbowing Nature lovers out of control in the
conservation community. Well-written, heavily footnoted, index, with
photographs of key conservation leaders, 436 pages. University of
Wisconsin Press, 1985 (1981).
BATTLE FOR THE WILDERNESS by Michael Frome. Mike
Frome is a National Treasure. For decades he has stood as a
lighthouse of integrityin journalism, in conservation, in outdoor
adventure. Battle for the Wilderness, done originally for The
Interior this nation has had (Harold Ickes was best; Cecil Andrus was
highly overrated). 320 pages, index. Gibbs Smith, 1991 (1963).
ECO-WARRIORS: Understanding the Radical Environmental
Movement by Rik Scarce, Foreword by David Brower. Eco-Warriors is a
journalistic but sympathetic account of the direct action side of Earth
First!, Sea Shepherd, Greenpeace, and the Animal Liberation Frontit is
the most comprehensive history of environmental direct action. The
focus of Eco-Warriors is on civil disobedience, so it emphasizes the
anarchist/West Coast aspect of '80s Earth First! instead of the
conservation biology/biocentric aspect. Nancy and I are on the cover in
David Crosss classic photo. Scarce became (involuntarily) a freedom of
the press hero by refusing to testify to a federal grand jury about his
sources for Eco-Warriors. He was jailed in a great travesty of justice. The
court set him free after realizing that Scarce's integrity was stronger than
the government's bars. Hes now a college professor. Footnotes, index,
320 pages. The Noble Press, 1990.
WILD ANIMALS AND AMERICAN ENVIRONMENTAL
ETHICS by Lisa Mighetto. Dr. Mighetto, a history professor at the
University of Puget Sound, has written a history of American attitudes
and practices toward wildlife. Her history clearly identifies the roles
played by popular writers, hunters, humanitarians, and ecologists in
influencing attitudes toward animals. She uses this background to
discuss predator control, biocentrism, elimination of exotic species, and
other current topics. Whether you are an animal rights activist wishing
to protect animals out of compassion or an ecocentric wilderness
advocate wishing to safeguard natural processes and the Big Outside,
Mighetto has much good history and clear thinking to offer. Index,
footnotes, bibliography, many black & white photos, 177 pages.
University of Arizona Press, 1991.
THE EVERGLADES: River of Grass by Marjory Stoneman Douglas,
illustrated by Robert Fink. The first edition of this book helped establish
Everglades National Park. Douglas was a revered conservationist in
Florida, working to protect the Everglades her whole life (she lived to be
over 100). River of Grass is a classic American book, and Douglas stands
tall as a rebuke to those who thought and think that men were and are
Deep Ecology and wilderness. Marxism and the Myth of the Noble
Savage color her analysis; by her definition of what radical is, Ive
never been one. Notes, index, figures, 288 pages. Routledge, 1992.
FORCING THE SPRING: The Transformation of the American
Environmental Movement by Robert Gottlieb. Academics, politicians,
reporters, the general public, and even most conservation activists
believe in The Myth of the Environmental Movement, which argues
that environmentalism grew out of the narrow wildlife and wildland
conservation movement with Earth Day 1970. A far better analysis, I
think, is that conservation and environmentalism are two separate
movements with different constituencies, issues, and histories.
Environmentalism is about human health issues of pollution and quality
of life; conservation is about wilderness, wildlife, public lands, and
biodiversity. The strength of this deeply flawed book is Gottlieb's tracing
of the true roots of environmentalism to the public health, urban
improvement, and workplace safety movements of the turn of the
century. The author shows a strong New Left bias throughout, and
displays an ignorance, disinterest, and even hostility to conservation
concerns. Forcing the Spring completely ignores grassroots conservation,
including local Sierra Club groups and small regional conservation
groups (and the role of strong women in such groups). Index, 413 pages.
Island Press, 1993.
AMERICAN ENVIRONMENTALISM: The U.S. Environmental
Movement, 1970-1990 edited by Riley E. Dunlap and Angela G. Mertig. This
is an exploration of the changes in the movement by an incisive group of
ecological sociologists including the editors, Bill Devall, Mike McCloskey
(of the Sierra Club), and others. Chapters look at 20 years of conservation
and environmentalism from these perspectives: Overview, National
Groups, Grassroots Groups, African-Americans, Deep Ecology and
Radical Environmentalists, Global Environmentalism, An Insider's View,
and Public Opinion. This is the best socio/poli-sci study I've read of the
movement. Index, references, footnotes, graphs, charts, 121 pages. Taylor
& Francis, 1992.
ENVIRONMENTALISTS: Vanguard for a New Society by Lester
W. Milbrath. This was a much-quoted review of the
environmental/conservation movement and a cross-cultural study of
Roderick Nash
WILDERNESS AND THE AMERICAN MIND Fourth Edition
by Roderick Nash. Nash's peerless history of American attitudes
toward the wilderness is the most important book available for
understanding the dynamic interplay between humans and nature
in the New World. Now in an expanded, revised fourth edition with
greater emphasis on wildlands networks, and chapters on
wilderness management, Wild & Scenic Rivers, Alaskan wilderness,
and international perspectives, it is a must for every conservation
bookshelf. Wilderness and the American Mind is the most complete
history of the effort to preserve wilderness. Wilderness and the
American Mind was my bible for knowing the wilderness movement
Conservation
Extinction
whose fruits are no longer being dispersed, Barlow shows how the
extinction of the North American megafauna discombobulated
ecosystems and ecological and evolutionary processes throughout
the continent. Connie is a visionary who has stirred up enthusiasm
for Pleistocene rewilding. This is a very readable and entertaining
book.
THE CALL OF DISTANT MAMMOTHS: Why the Ice Age
Mammals Disappeared by Peter D. Ward. Copernicus, New York,
1997. Ward, a distinguished paleontologist at the University of
Washington, gives a clear, highly readable study of mass extinctions
and their causes. His main focus is the Pleistocene extinction,
however, and by drawing on a sweep of research he makes a solid,
convincing case that humans caused the extinction of megafauna
around the world. Some of the strongest research he discusses is
otherwise little-known. If I had to recommend just one book on the
Pleistocene extinction, The Call Of Distant Mammoths would be it.
Though its subject is heartbreaking (at least for me), it is a gripping,
fascinating tour of the loss of the biggest terrestrial animals. Well
illustrated, tables, references, index, 241 pages.
Conservation Biology
the leading conservation biologists in the world: Hector Arita, Diane BoydHeger, Eric Dinerstein, Rudolfo Dirzo, Dan Doak, Andy Dobson, James A.
Estes, Mercedes Foster, Steve Gatewood, Barrie Gilbert, Michael Gilpin,
Martha Groom, Deborah B. Jensen, David Johns, Richard L. Knight, Carlos
Martinez del Rio, Dave Mattson, Brian J. Miller, L. Scott Mills, Lisa Mills, Elliott
A. Norse, Reed F. Noss, Paul Paquet, Katherine Ralls, Sadie Ryan, J. Michael
Scott, Daniel Simberloff, and Steve Trombulak. Continental Conservation is
scientifically solid but is also readable and understandable for the nonscientist.
The Rewilding Institute is honored to offer Continental Conservation for sale
directly through our website. A conservation library without Continental
Conservation isnt fit to be called a conservation library. $29.00 postpaid from
The Rewilding Institute. Island Press, 1999. UNCLE DAVES SECOND
SIXPACK SELECTION
SOUTHERN ROCKIES WILDLANDS NETWORK VISION
A Science-Based Approach to Rewilding the Southern Rockies by
Brian Miller et al. (Southern Rockies Ecosystem Project and Colorado
Mountain Club Press, Golden, CO, 2004). Covers ecological wounds
and healing ecological wounds in Southern Rockies.
SKY ISLANDS WILDLANDS NETWORK
CONSERVATION PLAN by Dave Foreman et al. (The Wildlands
Project 2000). Covers the ecological wounds and how to heal them
in the Sky Islands of southern New Mexico and Arizona (this is the
initial discussion of the healing-the-wounds approach). CD
available from Kim Vacariu, The Wildlands Project, at 520-884-0875
or [email protected].
NEW MEXICO HIGHLANDS WILDLANDS NETWORK
VISION by Dave Foreman et al. (The Wildlands Project 2003). Covers
the ecological wounds and how to heal them in New Mexico. CD
only available from Kim Vacariu, The Wildlands Project, at 520-8840875 or [email protected].
WHAT EVOLUTION IS by Ernst Mayr (Basic Books, NY, 2001).
This, the best and wisest survey of biological evolution by one of the
greatest biologists of the 20th century, is an essential background to
understanding the Sixth Great Extinction.
WHAT MAKES BIOLOGY UNIQUE? Considerations on the
Autonomy of a Scientific Discipline by Ernst Mayr. Cambridge
University Press, Cambridge, UK, 2004.
over island biogeography and its application. At the time it came out, I
wrote, Shafer's general guidelines for nature reserve design are very
important. Every conservationist who is drawing lines on maps should
read this moderately-priced book. Since then, of course, conservation
biology has come far, and debates about the value of wildlife movement
linkages are in the past. For understanding the evolution of sciencebased protected-area design, Shafer is a key document. Index, 850citation bibliography, heavily illustrated with black & white photos,
aerial photos, graphs, maps, and drawings. 189 pages. Smithsonian
Institution Press, 1990.
Edward O. Wilson
THE DIVERSITY OF LIFE by Edward O. Wilson. The Diversity of
Life is a triumph. It is a profound book in an eloquent, popular style
by a distinguished conservation biologist. Wilson describes, through
the eons of time, the process of speciation that has flowered into the
abundance and beauty of today's living Earth, and presents the
concepts of conservation biology in a non-technical way. He also
describes the dark forces that are devastating today's lovely wild
exultation of life, and outlines ways for humans to halt the carnage
and live in harmony with Nature. Wilson writes, In the chapters
that follow, I will describe the formation of life's diversity as it is
understood by most biologists. I will give evidence that humanity
has initiated the sixth great extinction spasm, rushing to eternity a
large fraction of our fellow species in a single generation. And
finally, I will argue that every scrap of biological diversity is
priceless, to be learned from and cherished, and never to be
surrendered without a struggle. At the time of its publication The
Diversity of Life was the best general overview of biodiversity for the
lay reader and for conservationists, and is still invaluable. Color and
black & white photos and illustrations, maps, tables, graphs, index,
glossary, further reading, 424 pages. WW Norton, 1993 (1992).
THE FUTURE OF LIFE by Edward O. Wilson (Knopf 2002). This
is Wilsons worthy follow up to Diversity of Life. It is an
authoritative, inspiring overview of biological diversity and the
extinction crisis threatening it. No other book does a better job of this.
With that said, let me mention a few reasons The Future of Life is so
good. In tallying the causes of the extinction crisis, Wilson
forthrightly discusses the population explosion. He also considers
Michael Soul
ConservationGeneral
Response to Anticonservationists
REINVENTING NATURE? Responses to Postmodern
Deconstruction Edited by Michael E. Soul and Gary Lease. Island
know about cows in the West. It is a basic necessity for grazing and
public lands activists. Contact list, statistics, 500-item bibliography, index,
more than 1000 illustrations (photos, drawings, cartoons, graphs, charts,
maps), oversized, 602 pages. 1991.
Public Lands
International
HOTSPOTS REVISITED: Earths Biologically Richest And
Most Endangered Terrestrial Ecoregions by Russell A. Mittermeier et
al., Foreword by Harrison Ford. Cemex, Mexico City, 2004.
WILDERNESS: Earths Last Wild Places by Russell A.
Mittermeier et al. Cemex, Mexico City, 2002.
SONG FOR THE BLUE OCEAN by Carl Safina. Henry Holt,
New York, 1997.
Reference
Vision
Economics
Anthologies
THE GREEN READER: Essays toward a Sustainable Society edited
by Dr. Andrew Dobson. This anthology by a British professor of political
science shows remarkable depth and breadth. Contributors include some
of the leading conservation, environmental, and green thinkers of our
century: Rachel Carson, Aldo Leopold, Aldous Huxley, Donella
Meadows, Garret Hardin, David Ehrenfeld, James Lovelock, Murray
Bookchin, Fritjof Capra, Kirkpatrick Sale, EF Schumacher, Petra Kelly, Ed
Abbey, and even that scruffy rogue, Dave Foreman. David Brower said
this book is a treasury of the thinking that can spare people from the
New World disorder toward which we are now headed. Index, 280
pages. Mercury House, 1991.
THE ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS AND POLICY BOOK:
Philosophy, Ecology, Economics edited by Donald VanDeVeer and
Christine Pierce. This comprehensive university textbook is also of value
to conservation, environmental, animal rights, and green activists. The
editors offer an introduction to ethical theory and then preview the issues
each chapter considers. The collected essays cover a wide range of topics
including: preserving biodiversity, moral relations with nonhumans,
moral standing of ecosystems, deep ecology, ecofeminism, third-world
criticism of conservationists, market solutions, cost-benefit analysis,
ecological sustainability, overpopulation, private property and takings,
value of forests and wilderness, ozone deterioration, global warming,
and modes of activism. Contributors include Lynn White, Jr., Alice
Walker, Peter Singer, Barry Lopez, E. O. Wilson, Holmes Rolston III, N.
Scott Momaday, Christopher Stone, Paul Taylor, Aldo Leopold, J. Baird
Callicott, Bill Devall and George Sessions, Arne Naess, Murray Bookchin,
Dave Foreman, Val Plumwood, Karen Warren, Vandana Shiva, Mark
Sagoff, Herman Daly, William Ruckelshaus, Garrett Hardin, Ronnie
Hawkins, Julian Simon, John Locke, Stephen Jay Gould, David Ehrenfeld,
Norman Myers, Ramachandra Guha, Rachel Carson, Stephen Schneider,
Rik Scarce, and Paul & Anne Ehrlich. Whew! Looks like you can get it
all here. Bibliography, footnotes, some illustrations, 649 pages.
Wadsworth Publishing, 1994.
IN PRAISE OF NATURE edited and with essays by Stephanie Mills,
Foreword by Tom Brokaw. This volume has a unique concept in natural
history anthologies: Have leading conservationists and nature writers
review the classics of the genre and then feature short excerpts from each
work reviewed. Leave it to the crafty, literary mind of Stephanie Mills to
come up with this approach. Included are: Peter Warshall on Lynn
Margulis's Microcosmos, David Rains Wallace on Stephen J. Gould's The
Flamingo's Smile, Joel Hedgpeth on Carl Sauer's books, Richard Nelson on
Barry Lopez's Arctic Dreams, Peter Berg on Raymond Dasmann's
Environmental Conservation, Peter Borrelli on George Perkins Marsh's Man
and Nature, J. Baird Callicott on Aldo Leopold's A Sand County Almanac,
Dana Jackson on Wendell Berry's The Unsettling of America, Stephanie
Mills on Paul Ehrlich's books, Elliott Norse on E.O. Wilson's Biodiversity,
Ed Grumbine on Ervin, Norse, and Maser's books on old-growth forests,
Joe Kane on Catherine Caufield's In the Rainforest and Suzanne Head's
Lessons of the Rainforest, Doug Peacock on Ed Abbey's books, Yaakov Garb
on James Lovelock's Gaia, David Brower on Bill McKibben's The End of
Nature, Harold Gilliam on Lewis Mumford's Technics and Civilization,
Ernest Callenbach on Peter Berg's Green City Program, Tim Palmer on
Marc Reisner's Cadillac Desert, Linda-Ruth Berger on Rachel Carson's
books, Thomas J. Lyon on John Muir's books, Barbara Dean on
anthologies of nature writing, Margot Adler on Stephanie Mills's
Whatever Happened to Ecology?, Hazel Henderson on E. F. Schumacher's
Small is Beautiful. Mind you, I've listed only about half of the contents of
this thorough, but wisely succinct, anthology. Mills divides the book into
five sectionsEarth, Air, Fire, Water, and Spiriteach with an
illuminating introductory essay. Also included is an annotated list of
over 100 other important conservation books. At the time, In Praise of
Nature was the best introduction to conservation/environmental/green
writing. Index, bibliography, reviewer's bios, 288 pages. Island Press,
1991.
RADICAL ENVIRONMENTALISM: Philosophy and Tactics edited
by Peter C. List. A new growth industry in the publishing field is books
about the so-called Radical Environmental Movement. This anthology
lets leaders and activists speak for themselves: Dave Foreman, Ed Abbey,
Murray Bookchin, and key players from Earth First!, Sea Shepherd,
Animal Liberation, and the like. Wadsworth Publishing Company, 1993.
Lois Crisler said that wilderness without wildlife is dead scenery and
that wildlife without wilderness is a closed book. Our assault on the other
denizens of our planet is the saddest chapter in the history of humankind,
and our most grievous sin. Some of these books chronicle our destruction of
our fellows; others open windows into their lives that may yet teach us
humility.
LARGE CARNIVORES AND THE CONSERVATION OF
BIODIVERSITY Edited by Justina C. Ray, Kent H. Redford, Robert S.
Steneck, and Joel Berger. By the late 1980s, field research led visionary
conservation biologist Michael Soul and others to recognize that large
carnivores were key for maintaining and restoring healthy ecosystems
and biodiversity. Generally, when large carnivores (wolves, big cats, sea
otters, sharks, and the like) are removed from an ecosystem, that
ecosystem tends to crumble. Researchers have also shown through
studies after the restoration of wolves in Yellowstone National Park and
with restored carnivores elsewhere that ecosystems begin to heal and
many other species benefit after top predators return. This keystone role
of the big hunters is the basis for rewilding and is explained elsewhere
on the Rewilding Website. Although this notion was highly
controversial when The Wildlands Project was founded in the early
1990s, it is widely accepted today all over the world. In Large Carnivores
and the Conservation of Biodiversity, Justina Ray and her colleagues at the
Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) have pulled together case studies
from around the world and papers from leading conservation biologists
such as John Terborgh, Jim Estes, and Dave Maehr to thoroughly
investigate whether or not large carnivores really do help maintain and
restore biodiversity. With some exceptions, carnivores do play this key
role, but the editors make clear that they should be protected even if
they dont. Large carnivores must be conserved, whether for their
ecological function, their intrinsic value, or their value to humans.
Large Carnivores is, I think, a useful and instructive book for carnivore
WOLVES
PREDATORY BUREAUCRACY: The Extermination of
Wolves and the Transformation of the West by Michael J. Robinson.
Ive known Michael Robinson for more than 20 years and have had
the pleasure of watching him grow into one of the leading wildlife
defenders and conservation leaders in this country. At the hardhitting Center for Biological Diversity, Michael primarily works on
Mexican wolf and jaguar conservation. With Predatory Bureaucracy,
he shows that he is also an indefatigable researcher and a clear,
engaging writer. He is also one of those rare people who is able to
see the whole forest and understand what it means after looking at
every tree in it. Helped by colleagues digging through wolf bounty
records in Colorado, Michael was able to delve deeper into the
details of predator slaughter in the West than anyone else has.
Combining extensive reading and studying the bounty records, he
brings alive the persecuted wolves and their driven human killers
madmen all of one sort or another. Parts of the book read like a
very good Western novel. Michaels genius, however, is shown by
the larger story he weaves out of the detailsthat the slaughter of
BEARS
CATS
TIGERLAND And Other Unintended Destinations by Eric
Dinerstein. Island Press, Washington, 2005. Ive long envied Eric
Dinerstein, Chief Scientist of the US World Wildlife Fund (WWF).
He has spent many months in exotic, wild places around the world
working to protect wildlife and to establish protected areas. He has
especially worked to protect the rapidly declining tiger from India
to Far Eastern Russia. Tigerland is his spell-binding memoir of his
work and adventures. Unlike so many who supposedly work on
international conservation, Eric is a real conservationist and one of
the most important conservation leaders in the world. Hes up in
the rarified atmosphere with George Schaller and a handful of
others in my book. When The Wildlands Project was started, Eric
was one of the first, if not the first, leader from another group to
back our concepts and work. His personal integrity, deep love for
wild things, and relentless work to protect wild Nature give the US
section on what the reader can do. Hansen is a former National Park
ranger and knows his subject well. Dr. George Schaller, the world's
leading expert on large mammals, calls Cougar an authoritative
and indispensable source of information about this magnificent
cat. Maps, illustrations, charts, graphs, tables, excellent color
photographs, index, footnotes, bibliography, 129 pages. Northland
Publishing, 1992.
THE SNOW LEOPARD by Peter Matthiessen. This is
Matthiessen's extraordinary journal of his fall journey in the
Himalayas with zoologist George Schaller in search of the elusive
and endangered Snow Leopard, and in search of himself after the
death of his wife from cancer. Index, footnotes, maps, 338 pages.
Penguin, 1978.
Birds
Wilderness
MacKaye, and the other founders of The Wilderness Society and the
Wilderness Area movement were primarily motivated by the threat
automobiles and the good road movement posed to the
dwindling backcountry after WWI. There was an alliance between
wilderness defenders and other antimodernists. He also shows how
the natural areas movement, led by ecologist Victor Shelford, began
separately but came to influence wilderness leaders so that by 1940
both unmotorized recreation and unmodified ecosystems were the
essence of Wilderness Areas. Driven Wild is an important book and
offers a compelling new interpretation of what motivated early
wilderness champions. Driven Wild was a helpful resource for me
in writing the wilderness chapters of Rewilding North America, and
will continue to be useful. I strongly recommend Driven Wild to all
wilderness activists, paid or volunteer, today. Know your stuff!
Wonderful gallery of historic photos, index, extensive source list
and endnotes, 343 pages.(University of Washington Press 2002).
ARCTIC NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE: Seasons of Life
and Land a Photographic Journey by Subhnkar Banerjee, Foreword by
Jimmy Carter. Mountaineers Books, Seattle, 2003.
WHERE WILDERNESS PRESERVATION BEGAN:
Adirondack Writings of Howard Zahniser Edited and with an
Introduction by Ed Zahniser. North Country Books, Utica, NY, 1992.
THE ENDURING WILDERNESS: Protecting Our Natural
Heritage through the Wilderness Act by Doug Scott. Fulcrum
Publishing, Golden, CO, 2004. Through his long career with The
Wilderness Society, Sierra Club, and now the Campaign for
Americas Wilderness, Doug Scott has probably done as much as
anyone to shepherd wilderness designation bills through Congress.
He is also a recognized expert on the history and evolution of The
Wilderness Act. His experience and knowledge is on display in this
slim, necessary explanation of and guide to the National Wilderness
Preservation System and the process of adding areas to it. Doug
particularly shines in deconstructing myths about wilderness that
have been used by agencies, wilderness opponents, and now
postmodern deconstructionists to limit wilderness designation. He
proves, for example, that the insistence for candidate wilderness
legislation passed since 1989 for Arizona, Nevada, and other states;
some roadless areas have shrunk due to logging and roading; and
we have added 20 areas we previously overlooked). We describe
and analyze 385 large roadless areas in the lower 48 statesevery
roadless area over 100,000 acres in the West and over 50,000 acres in
the East. We give location, ecological description, some history, and
analyze threats and status of protection. Our inventory covers
National Parks, National Forests, other federal land (including
military), state land, Indian reservations, and private landin other
words, the land instead of administrative boxes. We did it all
without GIS or computers. Our more reliable database came from
paper maps, our own knowledge, and the knowledge of wilderness
experts around the country. Ive been amused several times by
news reports of some new technical, computerized study that
arrives at information Howie and I published twenty years ago.
Introductory chapters discuss the history of wilderness
preservation, why ecological wilderness is big wilderness, and the
myriad threats to wild country. Reading list, address list of
wilderness groups, Bob Marshall's 1936 and 1927 roadless area
inventories, lists of roadless areas by size and by state, 21 maps, 490
pages. Harmony Books/Crown, 1992 (1989). The Big Outside is out
of print but used copies sometimes show up on Amazon and in
used bookstores. I was horrified just recently to find that I have only
one copy. So, Im looking, too.
THE MAINE WOODS by Henry David Thoreau. In my opinion,
whatever it's worth, this is Thoreau's finest book, far deeper and
more important than Waldenthough I'm sure some will grit their
teeth and blame my opinion on my meat eating. And, I admit, I
have, on occasion, been tempted to snatch up a woodchuck and eat
it alive and squirming to get to the very marrow of life. On his two
trips into the deep Maine wilderness, down rivers and up Ktaadn,
Thoreau got to the marrow of life and had the Epiphany that
enabled him to realize that in wildness is the preservation of the
world. Ktaadn, not Walden, changed American intellectual history.
Penguin.
COLORADO BLM WILDLANDS: A Guide to Hiking &
Floating Colorado's Canyon Country by Mark Pearson, photographs
National Parks
The National Park idea has been called America's greatest gift to the
world. Both America's love affair with National Parks and our failure to
adequately protect and manage them go to the heart of the American soul
and to the core of the biodiversity crisis. If the United States can't take care
of its National Parks, what hope is there for the future? What hope, indeed?
PRESERVING NATURE IN THE NATIONAL PARKS: A
History by Richard West Sellars. Yale University Press, New Haven,
1997. Sellars, a National Park Service historian out of Santa Fe, has
written the most important book about the U.S. National Park
Service. Although he works for the agency, this is not a puff piece.
Preserving Nature is about the struggle biologists and other scientists
in the NPS have had with the bureaucrats, engineers, landscape
architects, and cops who dominate and run the agency. He reveals
ecologically destructive acts by the NPS to exterminate predators,
spray DDT and other biocides, build resorts in sensitive places, and
so on. These outrages were opposed by NPS biologists, such as
George Wright and Lowell Sumner, who get their much-deserved
due at last from Sellars. Overall, he shows that from the beginning
until the 1990s, the leadership of the NPS was not interested in
ecological integrity. Since the book came out in 1997, he, of course,
does not cover the horror story of the laughably incompetent hacks
that have run the NPS under Bush Junior. Conservationists cannot
fully understand the National Parks and the agency that runs them
without reading Preserving Nature in the National Parks. UNCLE
DAVES SECOND SIXPACK SELECTION
OLYMPIC BATTLEGROUND The Power Politics of Timber
Preservation by Carsten Lien. When President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt saw industrial logging outside Olympic National Park he
snarled, I hope the SOB responsible for that is roasting in hell.
Had FDR lived and stayed President into the fifties, he could have
roasted some SOBs in the National Park Service. Yep, the Park
Service allowed some of the finest ancient forest in Olympic
National Park to be clear-cut in the 1950s to keep the timber barons
of Washington State happy. We can hope that those SOBs have a
special spot in Hell. But, I froth at the mouth. Longtime Seattle
conservationist Carsten Lien discovered the illegal logging as a
young seasonal ranger fifty years ago and resolved to write the true
And few conservation writers can write with as much hope and
inspiration as can Michael Frome. Frome tells the story of the
Smoky Mountains and their friends. In this expanded edition, he
discusses events of the last quarter century and also looks at areas
outside the Park. Those of us working today to establish large new
biodiversity preserves stand on the shoulders of the folks who
protected the Smokies. We can learn from and be heartened by their
story. Bibliography and notes, maps, black & white photos, index,
392 pages. University of Tennessee Press, 1994 (1966).
NATIONAL PARKS: The American Experience by Alfred
Runte. This revised second edition is a landmark of conservation
history. Not only does Runte provide a comprehensive history of
National Parks in America, he develops a penetrating analysis of the
pitfalls of arguing for National Parks on the basis of recreation,
monumental scenery, and worthlessness of the lands. He also
discusses the creation of new Parks in Alaska, how untraditional
Parks, such as National Seashores, fit into the system, and biological
issues like fire ecology. Footnotes, index, bibliographic note,
photographs, 335 pages. University of Nebraska Press, 1987 (1979).
YOSEMITE: The Embattled Wilderness by Alfred Runte. Runte
here looks at one of the best known, over-loved, and mismanaged
Parks. Unless we can do it right in Yosemite, can we do it right
anywhere? This book is a place to start. One example from the book
shows just how badly the Park Service has missed the boat in
Yosemite. In the late 60s and early 70s, the NPS slaughtered black
bears in Yosemite200 carcasses were dumped over a cliff. One
irate sixth grader wrote, Bears have a right to live just like you and
me and maybe even more. The smarmy chief ranger at Yosemite
patronizingly replied, You'd be surprised at how much damage a
bear can domany thousands of dollars a year. Maybe we'd be
better off with sixth graders running Yosemite. Illustrations, maps,
271 pages. University of Nebraska Press, 1990.
CRUCIBLE FOR CONSERVATION: The Struggle For Grand
Teton National Park by Robert W. Righter. Grand Teton Natural
History Association, Moose, Wyoming, 2000 (1982).
Forestry
It can be argued that American conservation has been more involved
with forestry issues than with any other. Certainly today's debate over
forest practices and our remaining natural forests is as contentious and
intense as is any discussion. The effective forest activist is the one who
knows what she is talking about. Fortunately several books, some from the
leading scientific students of forest ecosystems, back up in considerable
detail the gut feelings of those of us who cringe at the gaping wounds of
commercial forestry.
CLEARCUT The Tragedy of Industrial Forestry edited by Bill
Devall Coffee table books are not generally used as bludgeons in
political debates. Clearcut is big enough and heavy enough to use as
a physical weapon, but its power really comes from its images of
industrial devastation of our forests and the deep wisdom of its
essays. 180 pages of color photographs and 120 pages of text and
black & white photos expose the horror of industrial forestry and
make it the ugliest Nature coffee table book ever printed.
Photographers include some of the best in the business like Jack
Dykinga, Gary Braasch, Daniel Dancer, Galen Rowell, Trygve Steen,
and George Wuerthner. Essays are from some of the best in the
business, too: Chris Maser, Herb Hammond, Mitch Lansky,
Warwick Fox, Alan Drengson, Reed Noss, Dave Foreman, Ed
Grumbine, Felice Pace, Jim Cooperman, Colleen McCrory, and
Orville Camp. This was the first of the activist big picture books
produced by Doug Tompkins. 300 pages, 13" x 12". Sierra Club
Books and the Foundation for Deep Ecology, 1994.
WILDFIRE: A Century of Failed Forest Policy edited by George
Wuerthner. Foundation for Deep Ecology/Island Press, Washington,
2006.
average of a month every year rafting and canoeing. Wild rivers are
in my blood. The Wild and Scenic Rivers of America is the
comprehensive book on river protection. Palmer covers the
importance of protecting river ecosystems, state and local protection
systems, descriptions of each of the major rivers in the National
Wild & Scenic Rivers System, how and why rivers are chosen for
inclusion, continuing threats to rivers, and what can be done to
make the system more effective and more inclusive. It is still a
worthwhile resource. Index, 32 page photo section, 339 pages.
Island Press, 1993.
ENDANGERED RIVERS And the Conservation Movement
by Tim Palmer. Although dams and other river-destroying projects
have played a major role in the history of the conservation
movement, the National Wild & Scenic Rivers System is the least
known and most neglected of our nation's preservation systems.
While a number of good books have been written about the legacy
of river destruction and water development in the United States,
none have focused on the effort to preserve free-flowing rivers until
Tim Palmer's exhaustively researched and finely crafted history
came along. This is a necessary addition to the field of conservation
history and no wild river lover should be without it, even though it
is 20 years old. Includes 40 full-color photographs by the author. 316
pages, index, references, appendices. University of California Press,
1986.
A STORY THAT STANDS LIKE A DAM: Glen Canyon and
the Struggle for the Soul of the West by Russell Martin. Although
the construction of Glen Canyon Damn and the struggle against it
occurred before my time as a conservationist, it was one of the
definitive events in my life. David Brower, who carried the scars of
his compromise to his death, writes, Glen Canyon Dam ushered in
the modern environmental movement and Russell Martin's book
tells that story forcefully, dramatically, truthfully. Index,
bibliography, maps, 368 pages. Henry Holt, 1991.
ECHO PARK: Struggle for Preservation by Jon M. Cosco,
Foreword by David R. Brower. Johnson Books, Boulder, CO, 1995.
Values
Land Ethic
ALDO LEOPOLD
A SAND COUNTY ALMANAC And Sketches Here and
There by Aldo Leopold. A Sand County Almanac is the most important,
the loveliest, the wisest book ever penned. It was selected by more
reviewers in Sierra magazine's overview of significant
environmental books than any other. All modern conservation
activism begins with one book; that book is A Sand County Almanac.
228 pages. Oxford University Press, 1987 (1949); various other
editions. UNCLE DAVES SIXPACK SELECTION.
ROUND RIVER From the Journals of Aldo Leopold by Aldo
Leopold. Conservationists are fortunate to have this essential
Leopold work back in print. 208 pages. Fine pen and ink
illustrations by Charles W. Schwartz. 286 pages. Oxford University
Press, 1993 (1953).
ALDO LEOPOLD'S SOUTHWEST: Twenty-six Early
Writings by the Author of A Sand County Almanac edited and with
interpretive comments by David Brown and Neil Carmony; Foreword by
Dale A. Jones. This book is a lagniappe for fans of Leopold. Reading
this eclectic collection of twenty of Leopold's essays, otherwise
unavailable, gives us new insight into the man on whose shoulders
we all stand. The evolution of the conservation movement
recapitulates the personal evolution of Aldo Leopold. You can see
that clearly in these pages. These writings focus on Leopold, the
Southwestern forester and hunter, rather than Leopold, the
Wisconsin professor. 250 pages, black & white photos. University of
New Mexico Press, 1995.
THE RIVER OF THE MOTHER OF GOD and Other Essays
by Aldo Leopold edited by Susan L. Flader and J. Baird Callicott. A
Sand County Almanac was but a small portion of what Aldo Leopold
wrote on wilderness, wildlife, and the land communityand the
David Ehrenfeld
THE ARROGANCE OF HUMANISM by David Ehrenfeld.
Ehrenfeld is a Professor of Biology at Rutgers and a founder of the
Society for Conservation Biology (he was the first editor of the
Conservation Biology Journal). In this powerful book, he explodes the
myths of humanism (the dominant worldview) such as all
problems are soluble by people using either technology or social
GARY SNYDER
THE PRACTICE OF THE WILD by Gary Snyder. Pulitzer
Prize-winning poet Gary Snyder is one of the elders of my tribe. His
deep, unpretentious thinking about humans and nature, his
unfailing kindness, and his dirty-fingernails work at reinhabitation
place him among America's greatest voices and activists. This
collection of essays is an eloquent guide to living in harmony with
the wild, and a piercing analysis of the relationship of wilderness to
society and to individual lives. 190 pages, bibliography. North Point
Press, 1991.
THE REAL WORK: Interviews & Talks 1964-1979 by Gary
Snyder. All through the decades from the Beat Era to the Deep
Eco-Philosophy
MAX OELSCHLAEGER
THE IDEA OF WILDERNESS: From Prehistory to the Present
by Max Oelschlaeger. This is the most important scholarly book about
the concept of wilderness; gladly, it is very readable and accessible
to those of us outside the field of philosophy. Although Philosophy
Professor Oelschlaeger covers some of the same ground as Nash
does in Wilderness and the American Mind, it is a very different book
and quite complementary to Nash's classic. This intellectual history
examines the culture of prehistoric hunter-gatherers, the transition
to agriculture, the role of Greek and Hebrew thought in removing
value from non-human nature, and the idea of wilderness as a key
component in opposition to modernism. The book then reflects on
five giants of American thoughtHenry David Thoreau, John Muir,
Aldo Leopold, Robinson Jeffers, and Gary Snyder. Oelschlaeger
concludes with a penetrating analysis of modern ecophilosophy and
calls for a return to Paleolithic consciousness. He sees the
wilderness idea as the essence of postmodernism, countering
human-centered Greens eager to chastise wilderness activists for
irrelevancy and misanthropy. I heartily recommend this book to all
wilderness defenders and to anyone interested in eco-philosophy.
488 pages, index. Yale University Press, 1991. UNCLE DAVES
SECOND SIXPACK SELECTION
THE WILDERNESS CONDITION: Essays on Environment
and Civilization edited by Max Oelschlaeger. Ten key wilderness
thinkers here weigh the conflict between wilderness and
civilization. Gary Snyder argues that wilderness values can renew
our culture; Paul Shepard points his finger at agriculture as the
cause of the ecological crisis; George Sessions contrasts Pinchot and
Muir; and so on. Chapters by Michael Cohen and Pete Gunter are
especially good. The essays are drawn from papers presented at a
ARNE NAESS
ECOLOGY, COMMUNITY, AND LIFESTYLE: Outline of an
Ecosophy by Arne Naess, translated and revised by David Rothenberg.
Arne Naess, Norwegian professor of philosophy and mountain
climber, originated the term Deep Ecology and is the foremost
international proponent of it (and an utterly delightful human
being). This is the basic philosophic work on Deep Ecology. 223
pages. Cambridge University Press, 1989.
IS IT PAINFUL TO THINK? Conversations with Arne Naess
by David Rothenberg. Doug Tompkins and Dolores LaChapelle, who
could both hike me into the ground, tell stories of how eighty-yearold Arne Naess has hiked them into the ground [I wrote this in
1993]. Arne, of course, is the foremost and most distinguished ecophilosopher of our time and the man behind Deep Ecology. This
book is the most accessible presentation of Arne's ideas and reveals
the playful mountaineer who really is Arne Naess. There is more
than a little controversy, however, about Rothenberg's intentions
and about how fairly Naess's views are presented through unedited
transcriptions of relaxed conversations. Rothenberg did not allow
him, for example, to elaborate on or better explain some of his
comments, which he felt were incomplete and could give a false
Natural History
Some of the wildest and loveliest books gather around this water hole.
But it time for me to say a few words about nature writing. There are
many beautiful works of natural history by fine writers. Many of them are
not to be found here. I want to snatch them up like Thoreau's woodchuck
and shake them. The only natural history in this age of human-caused
mass extinction that is worth a damn is activist natural history.
CHARLES BOWDEN
DESIERTO: Memories of the Future by Charles Bowden. My
friend, Chuck Bowden, is the gusanothe worm in the bottom of the
tequila bottle of modern Sunbelt life. But his words are sharp little
flint knives slicing open the fishbelly-white underbelly of this
strange brave new world and spilling out the horrifying guts polite
society ignores. Charlie Keating, Mexican cocaine dealers, Seri
Indianswhat do they have in common besides an ability to
fascinate Bowden? Read Desierto and find out. At least I'm only
referred to obliquely and not by name. 225 pages. WW Norton,
1991.
MEZCAL by Charles Bowden. At Ed Abbey's wake in 1989, I
stumbled off alone into the desert because I couldn't talkto
anyone. Bowden was stumbling around the cat claw and ocotillo,
too. He didn't speak. He just handed me a crudely made clear glass
bottle of purely vile mezcala picture of a Jaguar eating a deer was
on the label. This memoir of Bowden's search, through drugs, sex,
radical politics, Mexico for home, is a similar gift. The mescal
bottle, by the way, still sits on the bookshelf above my computer
desknext to the Coors tallboy can that Ed had me drink in
Hayduke Lives! And that I really drank during my talk at his
memorial service in Arches. 152 pages. University of Arizona Press,
1988.
BLUE DESERT by Charles Bowden. This is an eloquent and
penetrating study of the darker side of the Sunbelt. One chapter is
about the early days of Earth First!the crazed funeral ritual/pirate
ship attack on Jim Watt's 20th anniversary celebration for Glen
Canyon Damn (Spurs and Howie still can't drive a house boat). But
he must have gotten my belly confused with someone else's.
ED ABBEY FICTION
THE BRAVE COWBOY by Edward Abbey. Abbey's great novel
of anarchism was made into the classic movie Lonely Are the Brave
(1962) starring Kirk Douglas as Jack Burns.
FIRE ON THE MOUNTAIN by Edward Abbey. Written when
Ed still liked cowboys, this is the story of a gruff, wilderness-loving
cowman in New Mexico fighting to keep his ranch from the United
States Air Force. It is told through the eyes of the rancher's 12-yearold grandson who is entranced with the mountain and the
mountain lion who inhabits it. Inspired by the military takeover of
White Sands Missile Range. 181 pages. University of New Mexico
Press, 1982 (1962).
GOOD NEWS by Edward Abbey. Abbey's great postapocalyptic novel set in the ruined landscape of Tucson after the
crash. I'm still in love with Dixie Dalton. Penguin.
THE MONKEY WRENCH GANG by Edward Abbey. If there is
any book in Books of the Big Outside that needs no description, this
is it. Well, I wrote that line in 1992. I fear that today many
conservationists may not know this book, which has become
mythological in its own right. Abbey shaped my generation of
conservationists in the West, and The Monkey Wrench Gang was our
fantasy.
HAYDUKE LIVES! by Edward Abbey. When Ed died in 1989, he
left the still-somewhat-rough sequel to The Monkey Wrench Gang on
his desk as, I think, a gift to his friends, in which some of us appear
in various guises. Hayduke Lives! features that wild and crazy outfit
Earth First! along with the familiar cast of characters from the
MWG, and the world's largest shovel. Nancy comes off better than I
do in Hayduke Lives! (why'd you have me drinking Coors, Ed?).
Abbey's description of the 1987 Earth First! Rendezvous on the
North Rim of the Grand Canyon is priceless. 308 pages. Little,
Brown, 1990.
THE FOOL'S PROGRESS: An Honest Novel by Edward Abbey.
Cactus Ed's fat masterpiece, The Fool's Progress is a major work of
American fiction and a great legacy by an authentic American. It is a
semiautobiographical novel of a search for home and family. Ed
came to visit me while I was laid up in the hospital with a brown
recluse spider bite and left a copy-hot-off-the-press to entertain me.
513 pages. Avon, 1990 (1988).
BLACK SUN by Edward Abbey. This was Ed's personal favorite
of all his novels. It's a bittersweet love story between a middle-aged
fire lookout and a college student. Set in the Grand Canyon. 176
pages. Capra Press.
EARTH APPLES: The Poetry of Edward Abbey Edited by
David Petersen, Artwork by Michael McCurdy. St. Martins Press, New
York, 1994.
THE LOBO OUTBACK FUNERAL HOME: A Novel by Dave
Foreman, Foreword by Doug Peacock. You cant be serious! A sexy
novel about conservation biology? In this hard-hitting, actionpacked eco-thriller, I write about commitment, or, rather, about the
consequences of shirking commitment. Jack Hunter, disillusioned
and burned-out on conservation activism after years as a Sierra
Club lobbyist, leaves Washington, D.C., for his familys cabin in
southwestern New Mexicos Diablo National Forest, convinced
there is nothing he or anyone else can do to stop humankinds war
on Nature. Nevertheless, he finds himself falling for Dr. MaryAnne
McClellan, a conservation biologist who is as accomplished and
tough as she is beautiful. The leader of the Diablo Wilderness
Captain Ahab who said that his methods were entirely sane and
rational, it was his goal that was mad. For the Noches de Deciembre
gang (mistakenly called the Nachos by the media), their goals are
eminently sane, but their methods are mad. John D. MacDonald
praised Hiaasen, a rowdy and popular columnist for the Miami
Herald, for doing a better job than any other writer in combining
violence and humor. Hiaasen also does a superb job of exposing
boosterism and the gobble-gobble school of economics for the
madness they are. A madcap, bitter newspaper columnist, a former
pro-football player turned Black militant, an inept Cuban
revolutionary, a mystical Seminole bingo millionaire, and a
Saltwater Crocodile take on the Florida establishment with its
Orange Bowl pageant, chamber of commerce, and advertisingdollar driven newspaper. For gawd's sake, don't emulate the
Nachos, but reading about them is good therapy! Warner Books.
DOUBLE WHAMMY by Carl Hiaasen A murder in a highstakes Florida bass fishing tournament. A private eye named Decker
trying to solve the murder, keep from getting murdered himself,
and get into his remarried ex-wife's pants. An ex-governor of
Florida who eats road kills and hates developers. A sleazy, moneyhungry televangelist/developer. Sexpots. Violent inbred bubbas.
Fishermen. Swamps. Everything you expect from Hiaasen is here.
This is what fighting developers is supposed to be. 320 pages.
Warner Books, 1987.
NATIVE TONGUE by Carl Hiaasen Skink is back. If you've
read Double Whammy, that should be all you need to know to order
a copy of Native Tongue. Heartless brutes have stolen the bluetongued mango voles from the Amazing Kingdom of Thrills (a
seedy imitation of Disney World) on North Key Largo. A tonguetied businessman with a tattoo of Mickey and Minnie Mouse
making whoopee, a pretty girl in a raccoon suit, a poetic telephone
sex worker, a cynical ex-reporter turned PR hack, a steroidmainlining chief of security, a horny dolphin, a conservation group
of retirees led by a fast-gun grandma with two petty criminals in
towSkink has to work hard to be the most colorful character here.
Once again Hiaasen dissects the get bucks real estate mentality of
Florida with devastating and hilarious results. 407 pages. Fawcett,
1992 (1991).
Crises
Overpopulation & Carrying Capacity
Collapse
THE CASSANDRA CONFERENCE: Resources And The
Human Predicament Edited by Paul R. Ehrlich and John P. Holdren.
Texas A & M Press, College Station, 1988. An anthology from a 1985
conference, this book is realistic and hard-hitting as its title
promises. Ehrlich, Holdren, Garret Hardin, Peter Raven, Stephen
Schneider, Donella Meadows, and half-a-dozen other experts are
chapter authors. Noteworthy for its early (1985) attention to global
climate change. Index, footnotes, some illustrations, 350 pages.
OUR FINAL HOUR: A Scientists Warning: How terror, error,
and environmental disaster threaten humankinds future in this
centuryon earth and beyond by Sir Martin Rees. Basic Books, New
York, 2003.
THE FUTURE IN PLAIN SIGHT: Nine Clues to the Coming
Instability by Eugene Linden. Simon & Schuster, New York, 1998.
Linden recognizes the role of population growth in causing
instability. One of his nine clues is immigration. An excellent study
of possible collapse. Index, 282 pages.
THE WINDS OF CHANGE: Climate, Weather, and the
Destruction of Civilization by Eugene Linden. Simon & Schuster,
the U.S. and the oil states of the Middle East since World War II, and
shows the dangers this history with its short-sighted policies have
led us into. Maps, graphs, notes, index, 277 pages.
THE PARTYS OVER: Oil, War and the Fate of Industrial
Societies by Richard Heinberg. New Society Publishers, Gabriola
Island, BC, Canada, 2003. Maybe the best of the crop of books about
running out of oil. Heinberg considers population growth and
doesnt weave corporate-government conspiracies. Nor does he
offer easy ways to solve the crisis. Illustrations, bibliography,
endnotes, index, 274 pages.
SANDS OF EMPIRE: Missionary Zeal, American Foreign
Policy, and the Hazards of Global Ambition by Robert W. Merry.
Simon & Schuster, NY, 2005. Primarily a devastating attack on
Neoconservative imperial foreign policy, Sands of Empire also takes
on the Idea of Progress and forthrightly acknowledges how the
population explosion in Islamic countries helps create a powder keg.
Index, bibliography, notes, 302 pages.
THE LONG EMERGENCY: Surviving the Converging
Catastrophes of the Twenty-First Century by James Howard
Kunstler.
Human Nature
PAUL SHEPARD
(Reviews forthcoming)
MAN IN THE LANDSCAPE: A Historic View of the
Esthetics of Nature by Paul Shepard, Foreword by Dave Foreman.
University of Georgia Press, Athens, 2002 (1967).