Synopses & Reviews
His name is inextricably linked with a single work, A Sand County Almanac, a classic of natural history literature and the conservationist's bible. This book brings together the best of Leopold's essays.
Review
"Aldo Leopold was a rare and wonderful combination of prophet, professor, civil servant, and muddy-boot lover of the land.and#160; Like Henry David Thoreau and John Muir, his heart was in the forest and the field, and his best-known work,
A Sand County Almanac, has rightly been compared in soul and spirit to their writings.and#160; But unlike Thoreau and Muir, Leopold also spent a lifetime in the suit-and-tie world of government and academia.and#160; He led the way in propelling the United States conservation movement from garden and shooting clubs to government agencies and legislatures, and was perhaps the first person to fully perceive the importance of a new scientific disciplineand#8212;ecologyand#8212;that half a century later would have profound political impact.and#160; .and#160; .and#160; .and#160; Now, two Leopold experts have gathered together 59 essays to show the breadth and depth of his thinking and above all his intellectual development.and#160; .and#160; .and#160; .and#160; Flader and Callicott have done an excellent job of giving public voice to a pioneer environmentalist."and#8212;Brad Knickerbocker,
Christian Science MonitorReview
and#160;"Reading these essays is as fascinating as watching a great tree growing."and#8212;American Forests
Review
and#160;"A fascinating intellectual history.and#160; .and#160; .and#160; .and#160; This book, which includes a helpful chronology of Leopold's life and a fine introduction written by the editors, makes it clear that Leopold was deeply involved in virtually all the land-use and environmental issues of his day, and that he outlined most of the arguments conservationists are still makingand#8212;and still losing."and#8212;Bill McKibben,and#160;
New York Times Book ReviewReview
and#160;"Readers have a new opportunity to look upon the intellectual development of this Midwestern-born scholar known as 'the father of wildlife management.'and#160; .and#160; .and#160; .and#160; Passionate and thought-provoking."and#8212;Billand#160; Nelson, Milwaukee Journal
Synopsis
A fleeting figure dressed in a white party dress roams the streets of southwest Chicago. A long-dead Iowa college student treads the staircase in an old building. A ghostly, plaid-shirted workman plays peek-a-boo with a ticket seller in a Minnesota theater. A phantom wolf prowls Ohio's Jackson and Pike Counties.
For decades, journalist Michael Norman has been tracking down spine-tingling tales that seem to arise from authentic incidents in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, and Wisconsin. In Haunted Heartland he offers more than eighty entertaining, eerie stories. Are they true in the world that we know, or only in a dark vale of twilight?
About the Author
Aldo Leopold was Professor of Wildlife Management at the University of Wisconsin.and#160; Susan L. Flader is Professor of History at the University of Missouri, Columbia.and#160; J. Baird Callicott is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Wisconsinand#8211;Stevens Point.