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Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: how to get to know a place.... Review: ....is what the author shows you throughout this highly readable tale of Scratch Flat, a mile-square locale near Concord. The history of its geography, botany, and inhabitants unfolds here in lucid prose devoid of technical jargon. For the ecopsychology course I'm putting together I plan to make this book required reading.A recommendation: the word "primitive" ought to be removed from future editions when used in reference to American Indians. Many regard it as derogatory, and even white readers may well wonder who is more primitive: those who inhabit the land with care or those who kill its inhabitants and "develop" it out of existence.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: how to get to know a place.... Review: ....is what the author shows you throughout this highly readable tale of Scratch Flat, a mile-square locale near Concord. The history of its geography, botany, and inhabitants unfolds here in lucid prose devoid of technical jargon. For the ecopsychology course I'm putting together I plan to make this book required reading. A recommendation: the word "primitive" ought to be removed from future editions when used in reference to American Indians. Many regard it as derogatory, and even white readers may well wonder who is more primitive: those who inhabit the land with care or those who kill its inhabitants and "develop" it out of existence.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: Important reading for any New Englander Review: I have lifted whole lecture topics from this book, and passed on copies to numerous students and friends. The idea is lovely -write an ecology based on an intimate history of one square mile of land-and Mitchell delivers it up in excellent prose that keeps one reading even when the material turns a tad dry. Why only 4 stars? I am not sure if this book will have "legs" beyond the landscape and history that it celebrates. It would be great to have a few more Mitchells do something similar to the westward and southward, so that we could expand our perceptions beyond the deliberate confines that the author has set. For those of us within a day's drive however, this is definitely a book to read.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: wonderful Review: Like Thoreau, Mitchell has travelled widely by walking within a short distance of home. Many of us are able to walk, few are able to see as acutely or reflect as profoundly on what we have seen. This book is not merely a pleasure to read, it lingers in the mind long after the final page.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Where the past, present, and future blend together Review: Mitchell goes far beyond "reading the landscape" of his town. He analyzes the history, anthropology, architecture, agriculture, geology, botany, and zoology of an area northwest of Littleton, Massachusetts, called "Scratch Flat." As if that's not enough, he goes one step further by investigating and uncovering the ancestral *spirit* of the place. This book is an easy, enlightening read that will not only have you looking differently at your own neighborhood but also contemplating our traditional notions of time. "[W]e are the future of the past, and the past of the future." (p. 200) Certainly food for thought.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Where the past, present, and future blend together Review: Mitchell goes far beyond "reading the landscape" of his town. He analyzes the history, anthropology, architecture, agriculture, geology, botany, and zoology of an area northwest of Littleton, Massachusetts, called "Scratch Flat." As if that's not enough, he goes one step further by investigating and uncovering the ancestral *spirit* of the place. This book is an easy, enlightening read that will not only have you looking differently at your own neighborhood but also contemplating our traditional notions of time. "[W]e are the future of the past, and the past of the future." (p. 200) Certainly food for thought.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Where the past, present, and future blend together Review: Mitchell goes far beyond "reading the landscape" of his town. He analyzes the history, anthropology, architecture, agriculture, geology, botany, and zoology of an area northwest of Littleton, Massachusetts, called "Scratch Flat." As if that's not enough, he goes one step further by investigating and uncovering the ancestral *spirit* of the place. This book is an easy, enlightening read that will not only have you looking differently at your own neighborhood but also contemplating our traditional notions of time. "[W]e are the future of the past, and the past of the future." (p. 200) Certainly food for thought.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Magic Review: OK, here's how good this book is -- I bought it and read it, then lost it. So I bought it *again.* It's a lovely book about the ancestry of a piece of land. The writing compares well with Annie Dillard's. Yep, that good.
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