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Rating: Summary: The first of its kind, and still the best Review: "Thus always does history, whether of marsh or market place, end in paradox. The ultimate value in these marshes is wildness, and the crane is wildness incarnate. But all conservation of wildness is self-defeating, for to cherish we must see and fondle, and when enough have seen and fondled, there is no wilderness left to cherish." (from "Marshland Elegy")
"It must be poor life that achieves freedom from fear." This, from reflections on being caught on horseback during a lightning storm, is a comment on the "civilized" mindset that wanted all to be safe, and so feared and destroyed wildness.
These essays were written mostly in the 1940's, although some of them are about earlier times in the author's life. In a way, reading Aldo Leopold is like watching Humphrey Bogart in those old movies, with his smoking and tough-guy sexism. We understand these as disreputable today, but can put them in context. Likewise, Aldo Leopold was in many ways a typical countryman of his time and place. He loved to hunt and fish, and even reflexively shot wolves, like everyone else. He came to regret that, and in fact to realize that in the new era, where hunting and fishing have become mass recreations, that the old ways just don't work anymore. But they did in his day, and he does not retrospectively apologize for having been, in a sense, just another predator.
But he was also a college professor, and an expert naturalist and ecologist. In this book he is a poetic writer about nature and a loving reporter of all things wild. No matter where I lived I would love this book, but having lived not too far from his sand counties and walked his restored prairies makes it the sweeter.
Rating: Summary: Aldo Leopold's Land Ethic Review: "A Sand County Almanac - and Sketches Here and There" by Aldo Leopold is divided into three sections. The first, "The Delights and Dilemmas of a Sand County Almanac" give us a month by month account of his depleted WI sand farm, which he is attempting to rehabilitate. These personal essays, odes to seasonal events, are often compared to Thoreau's "Walden". Part II or "Sketches Here and There" is an eclectic collection of personal ruminations. Part III, "The Upshot" addresses social and political issues affecting our environment. The Chapters in Part I are arranged month by month. For example, "February - Good Oak" is an ode to an eighty-year-old oak, felled by lightning. He reads each ring of the tree as if a chapter in a book, highlighted by events from the era's conservational history. Throughout the years, progress is countered with setbacks; more stringent environmental regulations are juxtaposed with tragic extinctions. "March - The Geese Return" is marked by the northward migration of the Canadian goose, whose migratory path is a testimony of "the unity of nations". Unlike other critters who can retreat into their lair if the land is still frozen, the arrival of the goose "carries the conviction of a prophet who has burned his bridges". Using his keen observation, Leopold educates us about natural and animal behavior. For example, the flight of the goose during fall hunting season is high and silent, whereas in the spring they fly loud and low, a raucous convention. Also, flocks comprise families, or groups of families, which is why they are often found in aggregates of six. The essays in Part III, published after his death in 1949 address the questions we are wrestling with today. Topics include "Conservation Esthetic," "Wildlife in American Culture," "Wilderness," and the compelling "Land Ethic" which tries to replace a sense of entitlement with one of obligation. "The Land Ethic" begins with a tale of injustice that highlights the despotic practice of slavery in ancient Greece. His point is that although we have evolved in our treatment of one another, in terms of land management, we are still ignorant of the injustice wreaked upon our landscape. Currently ethics deals with man's relationship with society and with one another, but still there is "no ethic dealing with man's relationship to the land and to the animals and plants which grow upon it". Ethics forces us to view ourselves as a community of interdependent parts. Leopold simply asks us to enlarge our view of that community to include the biota - the soil, rocks, trees, and animals living around us. Leopold laments that landowners act as if it is their right to extract as much from their land as possible. Such extraction may exhaust the soil, cause erosion and flooding, deplete the area of natural beauty and wildlife, and sully the common stream with silt, but because there is not ethic dealing with the treatment of the land, such an individual can still be hailed as a pillar of society. Leopold notes that obligations over self-interest are taken for granted when it comes to building roads, schools, and churches; but without a commonly held land ethic, water quality, biodiversity, and natural aesthetics are not a part of the public discourse, as land use is wholly governed by economic self-interest.
Rating: Summary: Simply the best Review: Aldo Leopold wrote these famous words: "There are those of us who can live without wild things and those of us who cannot." For those of you who cannot, this is your book. Aldo Leopold was a great man like a great old tree, with roots anchored down to earth and an intellect branching out towards new ways of thinking and looking at the world. The combination results in keen observations highlighted by elegant prose. I usually can't read too far into this book without getting a lump in my throat.
Rating: Summary: Simply the best Review: Aldo Leopold wrote these famous words: "There are those of us who can live without wild things and those of us who cannot." For those of you who cannot, this is your book. Aldo Leopold was a great man like a great old tree, with roots anchored down to earth and an intellect branching out towards new ways of thinking and looking at the world. The combination results in keen observations highlighted by elegant prose. I usually can't read too far into this book without getting a lump in my throat.
Rating: Summary: What else could be said? Review: How can one review something so brilliantly written? One can only say thank you to an author and person we lost much too early. American's need someone like Aldo Leopold again. Just when we had another brilliant soul, named Rachel Carson we too lost her. We have lost our way and desperatly need the likes of Leopold again before we pave everything, pollute the water and darken the sky. Maybe someone will appear as they have before, like Muir, Leopold and Carson; we can only hope. This book is a must!
Rating: Summary: A sublime experience, but not for everyone Review: I keep this book on my nightstand and read an essay or two after my pj's are on and before going to bed. My bookmark is a pencil for making notes in the margin when particularly wonderful passages are encountered. The margins are very full.
Aldo opens our eyes to worlds in our own backyards which have always existed but which have remained undiscovered due to our own dull-sightedness. I considered myself an avid nature-watcher, but the extent to which Mr. Leopold carries this hobby is humbling. He inspires any true fan to learn the names and habits of every tree, shrub, weed, thistle, bird, insect, and critter native to one's home county, and to hone one's journaling skills and master the talent of imagery and metaphor.
But, this book is not for everyone. I've read favorite passages to friends only to watch their eyes glaze with disinterest. If you're the outgoing, life-of-the-party, must-always-be the-center-of-attention type, then perhaps The DaVinci Code would be of interest. But if you enjoy solitary walks in the woods, canoe paddles on distant foggy lakes, or reading prose with your pj's on, then this is required reading.
Rating: Summary: Wonderful Review: Read Walden, then read Sand County Almanac. They might just change the way you think about the world.
Rating: Summary: Wonderful Review: Read Walden, then read Sand County Almanac. They might just change the way you think about the world.
Rating: Summary: Like a mountain. Review: The "Almanac" has been published several ways during the past fifty years, I strongly recommend the book published by Oxford University Press. It includes Thinking like a Mountain, The Land Ethic, and other important essays. From Leopold's Sketches: "Our ability to perceive quality in nature begins, as in art, with the pretty. It expands through successive stages of the beautiful to values as yet uncaptured by language." Scientist, educator, forester, philosopher, writer -- Aldo Leopold appears to many as something of an enigma. In his earlier writings, Leopold was a very different man than we find in this volume. In Leopold's own words: "I was young then, and full or trigger-itch." This insightful classic is a gentle, scholarly, fatherly collection of essays, observations and stories. Like Thoreau's Walden, it is revered, loved and widely imitated. Leopold: "Only the mountain has lived long enough to listen objectively to the howl of a wolf. ... The cowman who cleans his range of wolves does not realize that he is taking over the wolf's job of trimming the herd to fit the range. He has not learned to think like a mountain. Hence we have ... rivers washing the future into the sea."
Rating: Summary: Like a mountain. Review: The "Almanac" has been published several ways during the past fifty years, I strongly recommend the book published by Oxford University Press. It includes Thinking like a Mountain, The Land Ethic, and other important essays. From Leopold's Sketches: "Our ability to perceive quality in nature begins, as in art, with the pretty. It expands through successive stages of the beautiful to values as yet uncaptured by language." Scientist, educator, forester, philosopher, writer -- Aldo Leopold appears to many as something of an enigma. In his earlier writings, Leopold was a very different man than we find in this volume. In Leopold's own words: "I was young then, and full or trigger-itch." This insightful classic is a gentle, scholarly, fatherly collection of essays, observations and stories. Like Thoreau's Walden, it is revered, loved and widely imitated. Leopold: "Only the mountain has lived long enough to listen objectively to the howl of a wolf. ... The cowman who cleans his range of wolves does not realize that he is taking over the wolf's job of trimming the herd to fit the range. He has not learned to think like a mountain. Hence we have ... rivers washing the future into the sea."
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