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1 Burnside Botany- Wetlands

Sippewissett: Or, Life on a Salt Marsh

by Tim Traver

Sippewissett: Or, Life on a Salt Marsh Cover

 

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

A biography of the famous New England salt marsh, interweaving science, history, and memoir.

Tim Traver's Sippewissett is heir to a rich history of nature writing. Akin to classics like Aldo Leopold's A Sand County Almanac and Annie Dillard's Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, the book forms an eloquent bridge between ecology and memory, science and art. Traver alternates between remembrances of the Cape Cod salt marsh where he spent his boyhood summers and the history of Sippewissett, a place that has been studied by many of America's great biologists, from Louis Agassiz to Rachel Carson.

There is poetry in his retelling of the past, a childhood of mud and tides and water; there is great love in the peace and satisfaction he finds later in life fishing and clamming and watching his own children discover the secrets of the marsh. Traver manages to weave these personal details into mesmerizing historical passages and meditations on the ecology of place that read like whodunits; one discovery leads to another, from the most beautiful dance of life to more somber considerations, such as the way the marsh can tell us so much about our environmental crises.

Sippewissett is an intimate exploration of place by a man of science and strong family bonds. Here is one of ecology's most studied places through the eyes of someone determined to make sense of its beauty and complexity--at once private and public--filled with poetry yet grounded in science, a place disappearing in the face of development and global climate change.

Book News Annotation:

Environmental scientist Tim Traver traces the natural history of the Sippewissett salt marsh on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. The accessible narrative is a blend of personal memoir, scientific fact, and regional history. The struggle between the march of industrial progress and the conservation of this fragile environment is a central theme. Fine b&w drawings by Bobbi Angell illustrate the volume. Annotation ©2007 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Synopsis:

A biography of the famous New England salt marsh, interweaving science, history, and memoir.

Tim Traver's Sippewissett is heir to a rich history of nature writing. Akin to classics like Aldo Leopold's A Sand County Almanac and Annie Dillard's Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, the book forms an eloquent bridge between ecology and memory, science and art. Traver alternates between remembrances of the Cape Cod salt marsh where he spent his boyhood summers and the history of Sippewissett, a place that has been studied by many of America's great biologists, from Louis Agassiz to Rachel Carson.

There is poetry in his retelling of the past, a childhood of mud and tides and water; there is great love in the peace and satisfaction he finds later in life fishing and clamming and watching his own children discover the secrets of the marsh. Traver manages to weave these personal details into mesmerizing historical passages and meditations on the ecology of place that read like whodunits; one discovery leads to another, from the most beautiful dance of life to more somber considerations, such as the way the marsh can tell us so much about our environmental crises.

Sippewissett is an intimate exploration of place by a man of science and strong family bonds. Here is one of ecology's most studied places through the eyes of someone determined to make sense of its beauty and complexity—at once private and public—filled with poetry yet grounded in science, a place disappearing in the face of development and global climate change.

About the Author

Tim Traver holds a master's degree in environmental science from Yale University. He is a freelance travel and science writer and has had a column in the Providence Journal and Falmouth Enterprise. He works on issues of land use, wildlife management, open space protection, and environmental education and is past executive director of the Vermont Institute of Natural Science and the Upper Valley Land Trust and past director of the Norman Bird Sanctuary. Traver lives in Taftsville, Vermont, with his wife and three children.

Product Details

ISBN:
9781933392141
Author:
Traver, Tim
Publisher:
Chelsea Green Publishing Company
Illustrator:
Angell, Bobbi
Subject:
Essays
Subject:
Massachusetts
Subject:
Natural history
Subject:
General Nature
Subject:
Natural history -- Massachusetts.
Subject:
Biology-Reference
Copyright:
Publication Date:
20060931
Binding:
HARDCOVER
Language:
English
Illustrations:
, Y
Pages:
264
Dimensions:
8.58x5.92x.89 in. 1.06 lbs.

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Sippewissett: Or, Life on a Salt Marsh Used Hardcover
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Product details 264 pages Chelsea Green Publishing Company - English 9781933392141 Reviews:
"Synopsis" by , A biography of the famous New England salt marsh, interweaving science, history, and memoir.

Tim Traver's Sippewissett is heir to a rich history of nature writing. Akin to classics like Aldo Leopold's A Sand County Almanac and Annie Dillard's Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, the book forms an eloquent bridge between ecology and memory, science and art. Traver alternates between remembrances of the Cape Cod salt marsh where he spent his boyhood summers and the history of Sippewissett, a place that has been studied by many of America's great biologists, from Louis Agassiz to Rachel Carson.

There is poetry in his retelling of the past, a childhood of mud and tides and water; there is great love in the peace and satisfaction he finds later in life fishing and clamming and watching his own children discover the secrets of the marsh. Traver manages to weave these personal details into mesmerizing historical passages and meditations on the ecology of place that read like whodunits; one discovery leads to another, from the most beautiful dance of life to more somber considerations, such as the way the marsh can tell us so much about our environmental crises.

Sippewissett is an intimate exploration of place by a man of science and strong family bonds. Here is one of ecology's most studied places through the eyes of someone determined to make sense of its beauty and complexity—at once private and public—filled with poetry yet grounded in science, a place disappearing in the face of development and global climate change.

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