Showing posts with label nature writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nature writing. Show all posts

All Creatures Great and Small (20th Anniversary Edition) Review

All Creatures Great and Small (20th Anniversary Edition)
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James Herriot was a country veterinarion who lived in Yorkshire before (and after) World War II. His stories are funny, heartwarming, sad, and highly educational. And after reading this, you will either want to be a vet or be very grateful that you aren't one.
The book opens (after a brief chapter taking place several months later) with James arriving in Yorkshire, to be the assistant to the eccentric but kindly Siegfried Farnon (yes, that is his name). He becomes accustomed to Siegfried, Siegfried's mischievous younger brother Tristan (yes, that is his name), and the gruff, kindly farmers who eke out a living in the Yorkshire Dales. Pampered pooches who are spoiled rotten, savage pigs who chase Tristan around the farm, a nightmarishly strict secretary who drives Siegfried up the wall, James's car-with-no-brakes, cows running on three cylinders, a sadistic vet who makes James wear a rubber bodysuit, and an elderly, immensely wealthy widow who adopts a pig. And through this, James falls in love with the beautiful Helen Alderson and worms his way into the trust of the farmers.
James Herriot (real name, James Wight) was truly a one-of-a-kind man. He let readers into his head throughout the book, where the cows kick him across the yard, farmers often treat him as an interloper or a nuisance, and his boss gives contradicting orders from one day to the next. But he never loses his drive or his love of animals. (Okay, he hates some animals, but only as individuals) He even lets the readers see him at his worst, when he's humiliated by some recalcitrant livestock, and one horrible scene where he and his date show up drunk and mud-smeared in front of the girl he adores. (Not to mention when Tristan got him to use very feminine-smelling bath salts) But don't think that all of these stories are funny or romantic -- quite a few are aggravating or outright sad. James didn't soften the blows at all.
The people around James are just as fantastic: Siegfried, his weird but genial boss who can kick Tristan out of the house and forget about it overnight; Tristan, the mischievous anti-scholar who usually manages to keep out of trouble; and Helen, who seems a little too saintly at times (which isn't surprising, since James married her). There are a lot of details about surgery and stuff like that that will gross out the squeamish, but at least you'll learn a lot of medical trivia. (For example, what is a torsion?)
It's sweet, sad, funny, romantic, dramatic. "All Creatures Great And Small" (and its four sequels) is a fantastic read for all ages.

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Twenty years ago, St. Martin's Press published a volume of memoirs by an unknown Scottish veterinarian named James Herriot. Its title was All Creatures Great and Small.Within a year, the book had become recognized as a masterpiece. In the two decades that have followed, James Herriot has become one of the most universally loved authors of our time.Now, as we celebrate the publication of Every Living Thing-- the country vet's fifth book of memoirs-- St. Martin's is proud to reissue the book that started it all. Its pages, now as then, are full of humor, warmth, pathos, drama, and James Herriot's unique, richly justified love of life. His journeys across the Yorkshire dales, his encounters with humans and dogs, cows and kittens are illumined by his infinite fascination and affection, and rendered with all the infectious joy of a born storyteller.As one reviewer wrote," If you ever loved a friend, human or otherwise, this is the book for you."

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Of Prairie, Woods, and Water: Two Centuries of Chicago Nature Writing Review

Of Prairie, Woods, and Water: Two Centuries of Chicago Nature Writing
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In writing his magnificent Natural History of the Chicago Region, Joel Greenberg came across many interesting writings from early settlers. He put these aside and searched for additional writings after his Natural History of the Chicago Region was published. He assembled the writings in this volume. Individual essays, most written in the 1800s and very early 1900s, run anywhere from less than a page to several pages. The essays are grouped by the main subject of the writing. So, the book is broken down into the categories: Landscape, Botany, Land Animals, Waterworld, and Mindscape. All of the writings come from the greater Chicago region. Greenberg picked the top essays and I enjoyed virtually all of them. This is really a wonderful collection of obscure and otherwise hard to find nature writings. It can be enjoyed by anyone but those in the Midwest might find it the most appealing.

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In the literary imagination, Chicago evokes images of industry and unbridled urban growth. But the tallgrass prairie and deep forests that once made up Chicago's landscape also inspired musings from residents and visitors alike. In Of Prairie, Woods, and Water, naturalist Joel Greenberg gathers these unique voices from the land to present an unexpected portrait of Chicago in this often charming, sometimes heart-wrenching anthology of nature writing.

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From the Ground Up: The Story of A First Garden Review

From the Ground Up: The Story of A First Garden
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Amy Stewart tells the story of how she got to Santa Cruz & took over a patch of seaside earth in which a couple of fruit trees, a handful of shrubs & a host of weeds fought for life.
Each chapter includes helpful tips on neighborly propagation, composting, worm juice, rose pruning techniques, how to make a bug love you & concocting a gardener's bath. They are not what you think - some of this novice's results are hilarious while others are downright commonsensical. One of the first tips she gives us is on Making a Sun Map - do give it a go - I haven't looked at my garden the same since I discovered this clue.
Alongside the story of this young woman's determination to create a garden in which the plants will live up to her vision, she remembers family moments from her childhood while facing down obstinate natives more wily than her. Talk about turf wars!
A fine companion for anyone contemplating becoming addicted to gardening! Amy Stewart has since moved to northern California where she is hard at work on her second garden &, I hope, her second book.

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Weeds: In Defense of Nature's Most Unloved Plants Review

Weeds: In Defense of Nature's Most Unloved Plants
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As witty and lively as it is comprehensive, British nature writer Mabey's history and celebration of weeds leads us through the botanical marvels, folklore, literary allusions, medicinal uses and human interaction with his country's (and the world's) most invasive and hated plants.
Many, of course, if not most, were introduced by humans, cultivated in gardens like the infamous kudzu vine or sowed for commercial purposes like the melaleuca tree from Australia which was introduced to the Everglades to "dry out the marshes sufficiently to grow crops and condominiums," and sucks up five times more water than native species.
One botanist managed to grow 300 species from the detritus gathered from his trouser cuffs. The Romans introduced medicinal species to Britain, which persist long after the Romans have gone. Weeds arrive in goods shipped by truck, ship plane or on the fur of your dog, and prove their ingenuity and opportunism wherever a niche arises, be it a concrete walkway or a roadside ditch. Weed seeds have been known to bide their time for years, centuries, even millennia, if need be.
They have developed abilities to mimic crops and even adapt to rotation, mowing, grazing animals and, of course, herbicides. They take advantage of war to colonize bombsites and other ruins. The retiring plant rosebay willow herb thrived on London rubble during World War II and "was christened `bombweed' by Londoners, most of whom had never seen the plant before." "A bindweed root or stem chopped into a hundred pieces by a frustrated gardener is simply the starting point for a hundred new plants." Which produce 600 seeds a year, germinating in summer and autumn, or maybe lying dormant for 40 years.
Curiously, America was easily colonized by Britain's weeds, though the reverse was not the case, a fact which amused Darwin and has to do with much cultivated, versus little cultivated ground.
From Shakespeare's' cleverly allusive Midsummer Night's Dream to John Wyndham's nightmarish The Day of the Triffids, Mabey revels in wild plants' roles in literature, as well as letters, poetry and folklore.
A stimulating sojourn with the world's most fascinating and ingenious plants, this is a book which all but demands an Internet connection while reading. Line drawings begin each chapter, but Mabey mentions so many plants (many with different names here in the U.S.) with so much affection and appreciation that readers will demand to know what they look like.


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