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| 81. Case Files of the Tracker: True Stories from America's Greatest Outdoorsman by Tom Brown, Tom, Jr. Brown | |
![]() | list price: $14.00
our price: $5.60 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0425187551 Catlog: Book (2003-12) Publisher: Berkley Publishing Group Sales Rank: 20365 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Reviews (14)
I too was skeptical of Tom's claims about his super-human abilities of stalking and tracking at first. After all, his stories read like a hollywood-script. In reality, movies like the Hunted (which is based on the first tracking case detailed in this book) had to rewrite the story to make it more believable than reality. Tom's story, the true story of what really occurred, is unbelievable to anyone who hasn't become an obsessed follower of and believer in Tom Brown Jr. Either category of reader should be thrilled with this book. Tom gives more details and insight into several tracking cases he participated in. Including a search for an escaped Tiger in New Jersey, Tom tracking down one of his own trained CIA assassins gone bad (the basis of the movie "the Hunted") and other searches for lost children with both tragic and heroic endings. Most of all, Tom Brown is a gifted story teller. Each chapter carries you along an emotional roller coaster experienced through the eyes of the master tracker, the best in the world at what he does. Those who are skeptical and who read this book, will want to read more. Eventually after reading and learning the skills that Tom teaches, perhaps even taking one of his classes, they will become obsessed with Tom like I have become. Those who are believers and admirers of Tom (often to a fault), who have become obsessed with his abilities and wisdom, will find in this book details of stories we have been waiting for years to hear from him. In the dedication of the book, Tom mentions that this is the first of a trilogy. Wonderful news, I waited for over 1 year of delays for this book to be publised. No delay is too long to wait for the next 2!
I have Mr Browns feild manuals of various types and find them useful, and well written. Mr Brown is after all, a teacher. I think he would be better served to stick with it. Ill also admit that i find the idea of Tom Brown taking out 34 special forces soldiers with "a tap of a stick" in a training excercise, and never being seen by anyone in 7 acres of land to be highlt unbeleivable....But, like any good tracker/scout, ...i tend not to doubt anyone. especially this crafy soul .
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| 82. Meditations of John Muir:Nature's Temple by Chris Highland | |
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our price: $8.96 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0899972853 Catlog: Book (2001-06-01) Publisher: Wilderness Press Sales Rank: 102876 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
Reviews (1)
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| 83. Hunting for Hope: A Father's Journeys by Scott Russell Sanders | |
![]() | list price: $15.00
our price: $10.20 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0807064254 Catlog: Book (1999-09-01) Publisher: Beacon Press Sales Rank: 185411 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 84. Swampwalker's Journal by David M. Carroll, David Carroll | |
![]() | list price: $27.00
(price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0395647258 Catlog: Book (1999-07-01) Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Company Sales Rank: 109448 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Amazon.com Carroll saves his plea for the preservation of these fragile, fading landscapes until the epilogue, allowing readers to become as charmed as he is by the wetlands he loves. Annie Dillard calls David Carroll "a genius, a madman, a national treasure," and you'll agree when you've read this beautiful piece of nature writing, an unforgettable "tour de swamp." --Therese Littleton Reviews (3)
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| 85. The Anthropology of Turquoise : Reflections on Desert, Sea, Stone, and Sky by ELLEN MELOY | |
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our price: $11.20 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0375708138 Catlog: Book (2003-07-08) Publisher: Vintage Sales Rank: 27204 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 86. Red : Passion and Patience in the Desert by TERRY TEMPEST WILLIAMS | |
![]() | list price: $13.00
our price: $9.75 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0375725180 Catlog: Book (2002-10-08) Publisher: Vintage Sales Rank: 87921 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Reviews (5)
Williams carries on the great and ancient tradition of storytelling to raise consciousness about uniquely Western, and specifically Colorado Plateau, issues. From the Hopi and Navajo peoples, down through the early American explorers, the proverbial cowboys and the present activist community, storytelling has been a central method of encapsulating emotion, opinion and experience into messages that have wide appeal. Williams, in stories such as "Coyote's Canyon" here in "Red", presents her powerful vision of an environmental movement wrapped in the spiritual connection with the stark, often harsh, always awe inspiring desert and given wings by action. Like Abbey, Williams does not shy away from controversy, and her opening to the title essay is a list of places that strangely grows longer each time I contemplate the names set forth. Williams gets personal here, and the blunt approach of listing over a hundred places brings to my mind the fact that I have walked on much of that ground... and that I have seen the critical need to protect these remaining places from the industrious uses and agricultural manipulation that has occured on the infinitely vaster balance of the Colorado Plateau. In this way, "Red" has demonstrated its effectiveness. Some may say that as a resident of California I might have no reason to comment on Utah... and I would, as Williams exhorts in "Red", flatly disagree. Every one of us has a responsibility to work toward a better world, and Williams manages to say this without preaching it or patronizing the reader. (Besides, my mother lives in southern Utah, and I have walked hundreds of miles of that beautiful land...). In summary, "Red" is another jewel of a book from Terry Tempest Williams. I am glad to see "Desert Quartet" back in print, though I sorely miss Mary Frank's wonderful illustrations that were in the original. This is a book which is not a difficult read, nor a scholarly treatise... rather, it is a frank, realistic look at a serious challenge facing the United States right now.
Red is a collection of stories, poems, journal entries and thoughts centered in one place, the redrock desert of southern Utah. While reading Red I found myself feeling similarities with it and Steinbeck's The Long Valley and The Pastures of Heaven. Like both of those books, Red tells the different stories of separate people and the one place that connects them. But unlike those books, the stories in Red span hundreds of years. The place remains relatively unchanged through time. But the people and civilizations pass through this unchanging landscape living, making their mark on the land, and dying. TTW tells these stories in geologic time-desert time. The people stay connected. Hands connect the people. Hands appear everywhere in the book. Hands are the link between past, present and future. Hands come from the past in geologic forms with Anasazi handprints on clay pots and redrock walls, and a sharp obsidian chip "worked by ancient hands". They are in the present in biologic forms with a hand sliced open by the same sharp obsidian chip; one hand on the belly of a petroglyph while the other rests on a human belly in the present; and the story of children holding out hands to catch the desert's tears that drip from ferns. Then in the final paragraph hands are formed in prayer: "The eyes of the future are looking back at us and they are praying for us to see beyond our own time. They are kneeling with hands clasped that we might act with restraint....Wild mercy is in our hands." I enjoy reading Terry Tempest Williams. Her writing seems to always reach out and touch me. She's done it again, and this time with Red hands. ... Read more | |
| 87. On the Wild Edge : In Search of a Natural Life by David Petersen | |
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our price: $16.32 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0805047743 Catlog: Book (2005-04-07) Publisher: Henry Holt and Co. Sales Rank: 240809 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 88. The Geography of Childhood: Why Children Need Wild Places (The Concord Library) by Gary Paul Nabhan, Stephen Trimble | |
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our price: $10.88 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0807085251 Catlog: Book (1995-01-01) Publisher: Beacon Press Sales Rank: 200240 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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I was even more disappointed when I discovered that many of Nabhan's stories were presented in Cultures of Habitiat, a book tat was printed later but I had read first. This is a rambling, musing, anecdotal, diffusely reflective book. Not my cup of tea.
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| 89. Antipode: Seasons With the Extraordinary Wildlife and Culture of Madagascar by Heather E. Heying | |
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(price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0312281528 Catlog: Book (2002-07-01) Publisher: St. Martin's Press Sales Rank: 237495 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description The majority of Madagascar's wildlife is endemic -- found nowhere else. Lemurs rule the forest canopy, while on the ground, snakes and lizards search for evening meals of frogs and bugs, all against a gorgeous backdrop of rainforest. It's a biologist's paradise - but at times can also be a foreigner's worst nightmare. Madagascar in no way resembles what most Westerners know as normal existence. Technologically, it is laps behind the first world. Time shuffles by at a slow gait. Poverty is rampant - people pride themselves on how many pots of rice a day they eat. Language and culture barriers, combined with bureaucratic red tape, can make travel virtually impossible. In stories that are in turns moving, insightful, hilarious, and beautiful, Heather recounts her experiences -- from run-ins with naked sailors and unusually hostile lemurs to tropical hurricanes and greedy tourist entrepreneurs. As she carefully navigates an obstacle-strewn path, she gradually uncovers the hidden lives of the beautiful yellow and blue poison frogs she studies.And all the while, she is coming to understand her role as a female Westerner in a foreign society, and her intense love for and fascination with the stunning cultures and wildlife of Madagascar. Reviews (1)
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| 90. The Path: A One-Mile Walk Through the Universe by Chet Raymo | |
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our price: $14.28 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0802714021 Catlog: Book (2003-04-01) Publisher: Walker & Company Sales Rank: 170316 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description Raymo chronicles the universe he finds on his path with a scientist's curiosity, a historian's respect for the past, and a child's capacity for wonder. With each step, the landscape he traverses becomes richer and more multidimensional, opening door after door into astronomy, geology, biology, history, and literature, making the path universal in scope. "The flake of granite in the path was once at the core of towering mountains pushed up across New England when continents collided," he writes. "The purple loosestrife beside the stream emigrated from Europe in the 1800s as a garden ornamental, then went wantonly native in a land of wild frontiers. The light from the star Arcturus I see reflected in the brook beneath the bridge at night has been traveling across space for forty years before entering my eye. I have attended to all of these stories and tried to hear what the landscape has to say. . . . Scratch a name in a landscape and history bubbles up like a spring." Borrowing the words of the early-twentieth-century naturalist Robert Lloyd Praeger, Raymo urges us all to walk "with reverent feet, stopping often, watching closely, listening carefully." His wisdom and insights inspire us to turn our local paths-whether through cities, suburbs, or rural areas-into portals to greater understanding of our interconnectedness with nature and history. Reviews (2)
At times the book feels disjointed. After all, the only glue that holds this work together is the mile-long path through nature. However, the patchwork writing allows Mr. Raymo to explore his world - a world he happily gives to the reader. I recommend this book; you'll never view your commute the same. ... Read more | |
| 91. Walden: A Fully Annotated Edition by Henry D. Thoreau, Jeffrey S. Cramer | |
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our price: $18.90 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0300104669 Catlog: Book (2004-08-01) Publisher: Yale University Press Sales Rank: 13069 US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 92. The Boilerplate Rhino: Nature in the Eye of the Beholder by David Quammen | |
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our price: $10.50 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0743200322 Catlog: Book (2001-04-17) Publisher: Scribner Sales Rank: 125534 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description In 1981 David Quammen began what might be every freelance writer's dream: a monthly column for Outside magazine in which he was given free rein to write about anything that interested him in the natural world. His column was called "Natural Acts," and for the next fifteen years he delighted Outside's readers with his fascinating ruminations on the world around us. The Boilerplate Rhino brings together twenty-six of Quammen's most thoughtful and engaging essays from that column, none previously printed in any of his earlier books. In lucid, penetrating, and often quirkily idiosyncratic prose, David Quammen takes his readers with him as he explores the world. His travels lead him to rattlesnake handlers in Texas; a lizard specialist in Baja; the dinosaur museum in Jordan, Montana; and halfway across Indonesia in search of the perfect Durian fruit. He ponders the history of nutmeg in the southern Moluccas, meditates on bioluminescent beetles while soaking in the waters of the Amazon, and delivers "The Dope on Eggs" from a chicken ranch near his hometown in Montana. Quammen's travels are always jumping-off points to explore the rich and sometimes horrifying tension between humankind and the natural world, in all its complexity and ambivalence. The result is another irrepressible assortment of ideas to explore, conundrums to contemplate, and wondrous creatures to behold. Reviews (10)
In "The boilerplate rhino" Quammen writes about a species of bat that are eaten on Guam, slime molds, why we worry about dolphins in canned tuna and not about the tuna in canned tuna, racing lizards, rattlesnakes and the importance of nutmeg. It's another fascinating combination of rarities in good prose and explaining difficult things without making you feel dumb. Buy this book and you probably will want to eat the fruit called Durian which tastes wonderful but smells like a jockstrap.
His "Song of the Dodo" (1996) was a tough slog due to the weight and mass of four long books rolled in one, but the 20-minute essays here are just the right length.
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| 93. Three Among the Wolves: A Couple and Their Dog Live a Year With Wolves in the Wild by Helen Thayer | |
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our price: $15.61 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1570613982 Catlog: Book (2004-04-01) Publisher: Sasquatch Books Sales Rank: 20540 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 94. The Blue Bear: A True Story of Friendship, Tragedy, and Survival in the Alaskan Wilderness by Lynn Schooler | |
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(price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0066210852 Catlog: Book (2002-05-01) Publisher: Ecco Sales Rank: 257698 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Amazon.com Reviews (19)
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| 95. The Edge of the Sea by Rachel Carson | |
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our price: $11.20 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0395924960 Catlog: Book (1998-10-15) Publisher: Mariner Books Sales Rank: 144496 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 96. Phantom Ghost of Harriet Lou, and Other Elk Stories by Roland Cheek | |
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our price: $19.95 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0918981042 Catlog: Book (1998-05-01) Publisher: Skyline Publishing (MT) Sales Rank: 601693 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description Reviews (1)
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| 97. A Zoo in My Luggage by Gerald Durrell, Ralph Thompson | |
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our price: $8.06 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0140020845 Catlog: Book (1995-02-01) Publisher: Penguin Books Sales Rank: 42857 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
Reviews (4)
His stories have a incorporated a vivid energy and hilarity into his passionate memoirs of unique nature experiences that will entertain any nature-lover. While some of his scientific practices may now be considered obsolete, we are given a rare glimpse into the love and respect for all things living that has been a core aspect of any naturalist throughout the ages. I have since bought as many of Durrell's books that I have been able to find, and treasure each and every one of them.
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| 98. The Hidden Canyon: A River Journey by John Blaustein, Edward Abbey | |
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our price: $13.57 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0811822613 Catlog: Book (1999-04-01) Publisher: Chronicle Books Sales Rank: 72096 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 99. The Great New Wilderness Debate by J. Baird Callicott, Michael P. Nelson | |
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our price: $30.00 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0820319848 Catlog: Book (1998-05-01) Publisher: University of Georgia Press Sales Rank: 149497 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
Reviews (2)
The title of the volume refers to the recent challenges to the idea of wilderness, and therefore the book starts with the received notion of wilderness. There are wonderful selections from well known U.S. wilderness writers as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, John Muir, Bob Marshall, and Aldo Leopold. There are also important ideas from Jonathon Edwards, Teddy Roosevelt, and Sigurd Olsen -- each representing important components of the wilderness idea such as spiritualism, redemption, sacred american virtues of the frontier, etc. Then J. Baird Callicott, William Cronon and an assortment of postmodern and postcolonial scholars take this 'romantic' notion of wilderness to task. The idea of wilderness is seen as dualistic, ethnocentric, racist, and an attempt to 'freeze frame' nature. Defenders of the wilderness idea then include Reed Noss, Dave Foreman, and others. To some this debate is now a little weary, but it was a high profile and contentious discussion that is still doing the rounds today. There are also some hidden gems in this volume, and it is to those that I return most readily. Some examples are Fabienne Bayet's story from the Aboriginal communities of Australia, Jack Turner's call for the wild, Gary Snyder's more recent reflections on Turtle Island, and Tom Birch's piece on the incarceration of wilderness. These are cutting edge ideas that are taking many of today's wilderness thinkers beyond the postmodern debate into tackling questions of ecological restoration and the role of wilderness management. In summary, a solid and thorough discussion of the idea of wilderness. For those of us living and working in the U.S., wilderness is a crucial part of what it means to be American - the ideas in this volume deserve a large readership. But, don't expect to read from cover to cover - this is a collection to which you will continue to return and find great insight and delight.
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