Synopses & Reviews
America's great epic of exploration--the journey of Lewis and Clark--was also one of the most successful scientific expeditions in history. In notebooks filled with vivid and remarkably accurate descriptions of rivers, prairies, forests, mountains, native Americans, and wildlife, Lewis and Clark gave the world an image of wild country that has rarely been equaled.
In this richly illustrated volume, which features more than one hundred photographs and maps, most in full color, noted ecologist and writer Daniel Botkin traces the footsteps of the two explorers as they journeyed from St. Louis, through the breathtaking vistas of the tall-grass prairie and Big Sky country, over the arduous Bitterroot Mountains on the ancient Lolo Trail, to arrive finally at the Pacific coast and its the rugged, rainy, and darkly wooded landscape. As we travel westward, Botkin introduces us to the natural wonders recorded by Lewis and Clark--still fresh portraits of a pristine land--and recounts their many dangerous, challenging, and sometimes strange adventures. Then in his own words he describes the same sites today, providing unique insights about our nation's changes to the land. For instance, the author recounts Lewis and Clark's travels through the great tall-grass prairie, vast plains that stretched to the horizon in every direction, stunningly beautiful land that, adds Botkin, with the eye of a concerned ecologist, has virtually disappeared today beneath the steel plow. This is only one of the key problems that are addressed on the trail we follow through this wonderful book. Others, such as the endangered grizzly bear and the vanishing California Condor, are brought to the reader's attention in prose both compelling and poignant. By the last page of this chronicle, we are filled with admiration for the natural beauty of the American West, a beauty that is slowly vanishing.
An exquisitely illustrated and expertly written account of the western landscape, as it was seen by Lewis and Clark, Beyond the Stony Mountain recounts one of the great adventures of the American past while powerfully relating it to the American present.
Review
"Entertaining, thought-provoking, and well worth it. The conservation message is strong and urgent. Enthusiastically recommended."--Library Journal (starred review)
"With the rush to publish before the Lewis and Clark expedition bicentennial ends in 2006, we've had an avalanche of works to overload our bookshelves. Now comes a work that deserves a space on our shelves and one that will earn a place as a premier study of the expedition. While specialized books on nearly every aspect of the expedition exist, we don't have nearly enough of such rich, thoughtful, well-written, 'big picture' books. Building on a decade of thought, research, and writing, Daniel Botkin brings his scientific insights together with his skill as a naturalist writer to span the centuries and apply modern ecological thinking to the work of these exemplary nineteenth-century explorer/naturalists. It's a remarkable feat. Botkin demonstrates once more that expedition writings offer endless opportunities for new discoveries." --Gary E. Moulton, Editor, Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
About the Author
Daniel B. Botkin is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and is President of the Center for the Study of the Environment. A leading ecologist, he is the author of
Discordant Harmonies: A New Ecology for the 21st Century and
Our Natural History: The Lessons of Lewis And Clark. He divides his time between San Francisco and New York City.