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$19.00

Textbook Details

  • EDITION:
    1st Edition
  • ISBN:
    0312572972
  • ISBN-13:
    9780312572976
  • PUB. DATE:
    March 2011
  • PUBLISHER:
    Picador
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The Fate of Nature: Rediscovering Our Ability to Rescue the Earth / Edition 1 by Charles Wohlforth

$19.00 List Price
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Customer Reviews

Compelling accountby Christinestella

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The Fate of Nature examines eco-systems of the PWS in a thoughtful, poetic way. No doubt years of careful personal studies and encounters with wildlife, Native residents and scientists alike have forged this very sensitive and detailed account. Charles Wohlforth's realistic yet optimistic views of where we as a specie on Earth are headed and of where humankind personal responsibilities lie make this...

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The Fate of Nature

Product Details

  • Pub. Date: March 2011
  • Publisher: Picador
  • Sales Rank: 693,099

Synopsis

The Fate of Nature  is a profoundly relevant call to action from journalist Charles Wohlforth, whose award-winning reportage addressed the infamous 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill. In the wake of the tragic 2010 BP disaster, Wohlforth's voice has never been more necessary. Using as a stage coastal Alaska, populated by an array of odd and inspiring characters, he presents both an insightful assessment of our present state and a hopeful vision for our planet in his “thoughtful and felicitous new book . . . an inspired view of humankind's future” (Anchorage Daily News).

Publishers Weekly

Are we, by nature, like hermit crabs, wearing “discarded snail shells as armor against other hermit crabs, whom they attack in hopes of getting a better shell?” This wide-ranging book confronts the “competitive paradigm” to contend that “stronger than our greed and materialism, most of us feel a connection to other people, to animals and wild places, and when we're faced with a choice between meaning and material gain, we prefer fairness and the bonds of the heart over getting ahead.” Wohlforth, L.A. Times Book Prize winner (The Whale and the Supercomputer) and lifelong Alaskan, takes readers on a heart-wrenching journey through the tumultuous history of the state and its fragile land and seascape, from the complex, mysterious culture of killer whales through the clash of Native worldview and Hobbesian self-interest with the arrival of Europeans, the origins of the conservation movement and its ongoing battle with development, and the devastating Valdez oil spill. Wohlforth concludes, optimistically, provocatively, but convincingly, that “stepping off the material treadmill isn't denial, it's freedom.” (June)

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Biography

CHARLES WOHLFORTH is a lifelong Alaska resident and author of The Whale and the Supercomputer, winner of the L.A. Times Book Prize, as well as many other books and articles about nature, history, politics, and travel in the North. An avid cross-country skier, Wohlforth lives during the winter in Anchorage with his wife, Barbara, and their four children. In summer they live off the grid on a remote Kachemak Bay shore reachable only by boat. Wohforth began his career as a reporter for a small-town newspaper. As a reporter for the Anchorage Daily News he worked months in the field covering the Exxon Valdez oil spill.

 

Learn more online at www.fateofnature.com.