price:$4.88
Vintage
Not yet published Core2Duoノートレビュー 's review (great story about running) 『This book will definitely motivate you to get outside and run. It's a great story with a little bit of evolutionary theory thrown in as well; such as why humans stand upright and why we can run for a hundred miles.』
(Enjoyable) 『An enjoyable to read book that never gets boring. The 50-mile race in Tarahumara county and the build up to it keep the interest high, and the information intermingled within is interesting also. No surprise to me that people should quit spending big bucks on goofy running shoes. I am sure God knew how to make feet if we just learn how to use them properly. I have never seen any other animal on earth think they need special shoes just to run. Anyway, it's a good book. Interesting information combined with a very good story of a special race.』
(Changed my life, or at least the way I run!) 『This book is a must read for anyone with foot pain, back pain, or knee pain who likes to exercise and or run. Not only is it helpful, but also a really interesting read. I could not put it down. The Copper Canyon Indians are fascinating people,as are all the people who run extreme marathons, and the author tells a good story. I may never run a marathon,but since reconnecting with my (bare) feet, I have no more plantar fasciitis or back pain. My workouts are once again a pleasure.』
(Not bad...) 『Not a bad book however i felt the author went off on tangents for too long about things that didnt, to me, seem essential to the books purpose. I expected a interesting book about a hidden tribe and their world away from ours, however, the book talks a little about the hidden tribe, a little about science behind running, a little about marathons, a little about shoe design and a little about alot of other things.』
(The Key to Distance Running: Forget to Stop. You Will Forget to Stop Reading this Great Cultural Study) 『McDougall delivers in this great pop anthropology, a worthy addition to the canon of "running lit."
At the risk of making too simple a comparison to another book based in the Americas, Born to Run delivered in a way that I felt that this year's much-heralded The Lost City of Z did not. Grann's personal connection to the story that drives Z - the doomed final Amazon journey of explorer Percy Fawcett - is strained and often devolves into extrinsic introspection and autobiography. Fawcett's mystery somehow becomes Grann's memoir and the work suffers as a whole.
By contrast, McDougall inserts himself in the story of the Tarahumara only to the extent necessary to act as conduit to their incredible story. His experiences among them resonate through his storytelling.
The book combines reflections on running - both in and outside the context of our own calcified running culture - with amateur but not amateurish anthropology. The obvious questions: (why do these people run like this?) will soon give way to the book's more insightful and unexpected questions (why do any of us run? what does our running say about our culture? what do we value? how do we express that?)
The connectedness is real. Everything is working toward the same end: revealing those common threads of human nature (both physically and socially), and exploring how culture fashions those threads into the variegated fabrics of our distinct societies.
McDougall is really working at a high level here. This great story has found its teller. Highly recommended.』 『Full of incredible characters, amazing athletic achievements, cutting-edge science, and, most of all, pure inspiration,Born to Runis an epic adventure that began with one simple question:Why does my foot hurt?In search of an answer, Christopher McDougall sets off to find a tribe of the world’s greatest distance runners and learn their secrets, and in the process shows us that everything we thought we knew about running is wrong.
Isolated by the most savage terrain in North America, the reclusive Tarahumara Indians of Mexico’s deadly Copper Canyons are custodians of a lost art. For centuries they have practiced techniques that allow them to run hundreds of miles without rest and chase down anything from a deer to an Olympic marathoner while enjoying every mile of it. Their superhuman talent is matched by uncanny health and serenity, leaving the Tarahumara immune to the diseases and strife that plague modern existence. With the help of Caballo Blanco, a mysterious loner who lives among the tribe, the author was able not only to uncover the secrets of the Tarahumara but also to find his own inner ultra-athlete, as he trained for the challenge of a lifetime: a fifty-mile race through the heart of Tarahumara country pitting the tribe against an odd band of Americans, including a star ultramarathoner, a beautiful young surfer, and a barefoot wonder.
With a sharp wit and wild exuberance, McDougall takes us from the high-tech science labs at Harvard to the sun-baked valleys and freezing peaks across North America, where ever-growing numbers of ultrarunners are pushing their bodies to the limit, and, finally, to the climactic race in the Copper Canyons.Born to Runis that rare book that will not only engage your mind but inspire your body when you realize that the secret to happiness is right at your feet, and that you, indeed all of us, were born to run.
From the Hardcover edition.』 『Book Description Full of incredible characters, amazing athletic achievements, cutting-edge science, and, most of all, pure inspiration,Born to Runis an epic adventure that began with one simple question:Why does my foot hurt?In search of an answer, Christopher McDougall sets off to find a tribe of the world’s greatest distance runners and learn their secrets, and in the process shows us that everything we thought we knew about running is wrong.
Isolated by the most savage terrain in North America, the reclusive Tarahumara Indians of Mexico’s deadly Copper Canyons are custodians of a lost art. For centuries they have practiced techniques that allow them to run hundreds of miles without rest and chase down anything from a deer to an Olympic marathoner while enjoying every mile of it. Their superhuman talent is matched by uncanny health and serenity, leaving the Tarahumara immune to the diseases and strife that plague modern existence. With the help of Caballo Blanco, a mysterious loner who lives among the tribe, the author was able not only to uncover the secrets of the Tarahumara but also to find his own inner ultra-athlete, as he trained for the challenge of a lifetime: a fifty-mile race through the heart of Tarahumara country pitting the tribe against an odd band of Americans, including a star ultramarathoner, a beautiful young surfer, and a barefoot wonder.
With a sharp wit and wild exuberance, McDougall takes us from the high-tech science labs at Harvard to the sun-baked valleys and freezing peaks across North America, where ever-growing numbers of ultrarunners are pushing their bodies to the limit, and, finally, to the climactic race in the Copper Canyons.Born to Runis that rare book that will not only engage your mind but inspire your body when you realize that the secret to happiness is right at your feet, and that you, indeed all of us, were born to run.
Amazon Exclusive: A Q&A with Christopher McDougall
Question:Born to Runexplores the life and running habits of the Tarahumara Indians of Mexico’s Copper Canyon, arguably the greatest distance runners in the world. What are some of the secrets you learned from them?
Christopher McDougall:The key secret hit me like a thunderbolt. It was so simple, yet such a jolt. It was this: everything I’d been taught about running was wrong. We treat running in the modern world the same way we treat childbirth—it’s going to hurt, and requires special exercises and equipment, and the best you can hope for is to get it over with quickly with minimal damage.
Then I meet the Tarahumara, and they’re having a blast. They remember what it’s like to love running, and it lets them blaze through the canyons like dolphins rocketing through waves. For them, running isn’t work. It isn’t a punishment for eating. It’s fine art, like it was for our ancestors. Way before we were scratching pictures on caves or beating rhythms on hollow trees, we were perfecting the art of combining our breath and mind and muscles into fluid self-propulsion over wild terrain. And when our ancestors finally did make their first cave paintings, what were the first designs? A downward slash, lightning boltsthrough the bottom and middle—behold, the Running Man.
The Tarahumara have a saying:“Children run before they can walk.” Watch any four-year-old—they do everything at full speed, and it’s all about fun. That’s the most important thing I picked up from my time in the Copper Canyons, the understanding that running can be fast and fun and spontaneous, and when it is, you feel like you can go forever. But all of that begins with your feet. Strange as it sounds, the Tarahumara taught me to change my relationship with the ground. Instead of hammering down on my heels, the way I’d been taught all my life, I learned to run lightly and gently on the balls of my feet. The day I mastered it was the last day I was ever injured.
Q:You trained for your first ultramarathon—a race organized by the mysterious gringo expat Caballo Blanco between the Tarahumara and some of America’s top ultrarunners—while researching and writing this book. What was your training like?
CM:It really started as kind of a dare. Just by chance, I’d met an adventure-sports coach from Jackson Hole, Wyoming named Eric Orton. Eric’s specialty is tearing endurance sports down to their basic components and looking for transferable skills. He studies rock climbing to find shoulder techniques for kayakers, and applies Nordic skiing’s smooth propulsion to mountain biking. What he’s looking for are basic engineering principles, because he’s convinced that the next big leap forward in fitness won’t come from strength or technology, but plain, simple durability. With some 70% of all runners getting hurt every year, the athlete who canstay healthy and avoid injury will leave the competition behind.
So naturally, Eric idolized the Tarahumara. Any tribe that has 90-year-old men running across mountaintops obviously has a few training tips up its sleeve. But since Eric had never actually met the Tarahumara, he had to deduce their methods by pure reasoning. His starting point was uncertainty; he assumed that the Tarahumara step into the unknown every time they leave their caves, because they never know how fast they’ll have to sprint after a rabbit or how tricky the climbing will be if they’re caught in a storm. They never even know how long a race will be until they step up to the starting line—the distance is only determined in a last-minute bout of negotiating and could stretch anywhere from 50 milesto 200-plus.
Eric figured shock and awe was the best way for me to build durability and mimic Tarahumara-style running. He’d throw something new at me every day—hopping drills, lunges, mile intervals—and lots and lots of hills. There was no such thing, really, as long, slow distance—he’d have me mix lots of hill repeats and short bursts of speed into every mega-long run.
I didn’t think I could do it without breaking down, and I told Eric that from the start. I basically defied him to turn me into a runner. And by the end of nine months, I was cranking out four hour runs without a problem.
Q:You’re a six-foot four-inches tall, 200-plus pound guy—not anyone’s typical vision of a distance runner, yet you’ve completed ultra marathons and are training for more. Is there a body type for running, as many of us assume, or are all humans built to run?
CM:Yeah, I’m a big’un. But isn’t it sad that’s even a reasonable question? I bought into that bull for a loooong time. Why wouldn’t I? I was constantly being told by people who should know better that “some bodies aren’t designed for running.” One of the best sports medicine physicians in thecountry told me exactly that—that the reason I was constantly getting hurt is because I was too big to handle the impact shock from my feet hitting the ground. Just recently, I interviewed a nationally-known sports podiatrist who said, “You know, we didn’t ALL evolve to run away from saber-toothed tigers.” Meaning, what? That anyone who isn’t sleek as a Kenyan marathoner should be extinct? It’s such illogical blather—all kinds of body types exist today, so obviously they DID evolve to move quickly on their feet. It’s really awful that so many doctors are reinforcing this learned helplessness, this idea that you have to be some kind of elite being to handle such a basic, universal movement.
Q:If humans are born to run, as you argue, what’s your advice for a runner who is looking to make the leap from shorter road races to marathons, or marathons to ultramarathons? Is running really for everyone?
CM:I think ultrarunning is America’s hope for the future. Honestly. The ultrarunners have got a hold of some powerful wisdom. You can see it at the starting line of any ultra race. I showed up at the Leadville Trail 100 expecting to see a bunch of hollow-eyed Skeletors, and instead it was, “Whoah! Get a load of the hotties!” Ultra runners tend to be amazingly healthy, youthful and—believe it or not—good looking. I couldn’t figure out why, until one runner explained that throughout history, the four basic ingredients for optimal health have been clean air, good food, fresh water and low stress. And that, to a T, describes the daily life of an ultrarunner. They’re out in the woods for hours at a time, breathing pine-scented breezes, eating small bursts of digestible food, downing water by the gallons, and feeling their stress melt away with the miles. But here’s the real key to that kingdom: you have to relax and enjoy the run. No one cares how fast you run 50 miles, so ultrarunners don’t really stress about times. They’re out to enjoy the run and finish strong, not shave a few inconsequential seconds off a personal best. And that’s the best way to transition up to big mileage races: as coach Eric told me, “If it feels like work, you’re working too hard.”
Q:You write that distance running is the great equalizer of age and gender. Can you explain?
CM:Okay, I’ll answer that question with a question: Starting at age nineteen, runners get faster every year until they hit their peak at twenty-seven. After twenty-seven, they start to decline. So if it takes you eight years to reach your peak, how many years does it take for you to regress back to the samespeed you were running at nineteen?
Go ahead, guess all you want. No one I’ve asked has ever come close. It’s in the book, so I won’t give it away, but I guarantee when you hear the answer, you’ll say, “No way. THAT old?” Now, factor in this: ultra races are the only sport in the world in which women can go toe-to-toe with men and hand them their heads. Ann Trason and Krissy Moehl often beat every man in the field in some ultraraces, while Emily Baer recently finished in the Top 10 at the Hardrock 100 while stopping to breastfeed her baby at the water stations.
So how’s that possible? According to a new body of research, it’s because humans are the greatest distance runners on earth. We may not be fast, but we’re born with such remarkable natural endurance that humans are fully capable of outrunning horses, cheetahs and antelopes. That’s because we oncehunted in packs and on foot; all of us, men and women alike, young and old together.
Q:One of the fascinating parts ofBorn to Runis your report on how the ultrarunners eat—salad for breakfast, wraps with hummus mid-run, or pizza and beer the night before a run. As a runner with a lot of miles behind him, what are your thoughts on nutrition for running?
CM:Live every day like you’re on the lam. If you’ve got to be ready to pick up and haul butt at a moment’s notice, you’re not going to be loading up on gut-busting meals. I thought I’d have to go on some kind of prison-camp diet to get ready for an ultra, but the best advice I got came from coach Eric, who told meto just worry about the running and the eating would take care of itself. And he was right, sort of. I instinctively began eating smaller, more digestible meals as my miles increased, but then I went behind his back and consulted with the great Dr. Ruth Heidrich, an Ironman triathlete who lives on avegan diet. She’s the one who gave me the idea of having salad for breakfast, and it’s a fantastic tip. The truth is, many of the greatest endurance athletes of all time lived on fruits and vegetables. You can get away with garbage for a while, but you pay for it in the long haul. In the book,I describe how Jenn Shelton and Billy “Bonehead” Barnett like to chow pizza and Mountain Dew in the middle of 100-mile races, but Jenn is also a vegetarian who most days lives on veggie burgers and grapes.
Q:In this difficult financial time, we’re experiencing yet another surge in the popularity of running. Can you explain this?
CM:When things look worst, we run the most. Three times, America has seen distance-running skyrocket and it’s always in the midst of a national crisis. The first boom came during the Great Depression; the next was in the ‘70s, when we were struggling to recover from a recession, race riots, assassinations, a criminal President and an awful war. And the third boom? One year after the Sept. 11 attacks,trailrunning suddenly became the fastest-growing outdoor sport in the country. I think there’s a trigger in the human psyche that activates our first and greatest survival skill whenever we see the shadow of approaching raptors.
price:$10.20
Tantor Media
Usually ships in 24 hours Core2Duoノートレビュー 's review (Exemplary life of a modern hero or how respect and care open all doors) 『This is an account from 1993 to 2003 of Greg Mortenson an American climber that after failing to make the K-2 misses his path back and arrives to the small village of Korphe and how he fulfils the promise to the local leader to build a school in his village in Northern Pakistan. The story itself is vibrant and full of stumbling stones and shows how Mr Mortenson manages to go around all of them during a 3 year span and builds the school. He becomes so engaged by the first promise that ever since this has become his mission in life.
This story makes the book already worth reading. Mortenson is a rela hero not only succeding but also going endless strain to achieve it. Additionally it gives a very good insight in the lives and costumes of people in those remote areas of the world and shows their necessities as persons(decent schools, health systems, potable water).
The most interesting aspect probably is how the book breaks with many of the prejudices we might have on Muslims and the way they relate to other people. Greg Mortenson with respect and interest manages to get the support of religious leaders in the area that support his endeavours by educating children to improve the live of these impoverished areas. All this takes makes a very interesting turn when the war on Afghanistan starts after 9/11 and Mortenson experiences how locals see the West with suspicion but keep supporting his initiative.
Mortenson results showing that schools, especially for girls, will improve the life of the region breaking a circle of ignorance in the Karakoram; his actions and attitude are more enriching than the vast majority of motivation books.
The narration with many interviews and quotations of the main characters is lively, direct and touching keeping you tight to the book. The fact that the first thing that Mortenson does when he meets coauthor David Relin is handing out a list of dozens of people that he characterizes as his enemies underlines the credibility to this man and the story. 』
(Inspiring) 『This book tells a remarkable true story of one man's effort to accomplish something good in an area of the world where there is so much suffering from so many heart-breaking problems. His Central Asian Institute stays steadfast in its purpse: to build schools for the children in Afganistan and Pakistan. Greg Mortenson doesn't just talk it--he does it.』
(Very inspiring!) 『I randomly bought this book to read on vacation and was hooked after the first few minutes! It is very inspiring and has opened my eyes. It has changed my thinking that most people think only about themselves and don't care about others. That is clearly not the case here. I am inspired to help in so many ways. I'm so glad I found this book.』
(A Model for Peace) 『I wish I could afford to send a copy of this book to every person in our government who deals with Middle Eastern affairs, especially those involved in military decisions. This is required reading for everyone!』
(Required Reading) 『This book should be required reading for U.S. Citizens and you should not be allowed into a voting booth if you haven't read it. If you read only one book on foreign policy in the next five years. This is it!!!』 『
The inspiring account of one man's campaign to build schools in the most dangerous, remote, and anti-American reaches of Asia.
price:$11.02
Little, Brown and Company
Usually ships in 24 hours Core2Duoノートレビュー 's review (A Chicken is not only a chicken!) 『This is an excellent book. I just read the review in the New York Times and was disappointed by the last paragraph which stated that readers wondered how Foer could expend so much energy and caring on the fate of pigs and chickens when he should be more concerned about the death of 1 million children caused by malaria, and atrocities in the Congo caused by conflicts. This argument implies that: 1. we should not be humane towards animals while malaria exists, 2. as soon as malaria is cured, then we can take care of animals. Yeh, right, like that ever happened after we eradicated any disease.... 3. And just when have we ever ended a war somewhere and then moved on to help the animals who suffered there? It's a cheap argument... and unfortunately, one which is commonly used. Isaac Bashevis Singer said that for animals, every day was an Auschwitz. The pain of animals is as real as the pain of people. So why does it drive some people mad when we compare the two? Why don't they use that anger to fight against all suffering... We have only one heart. It's the same heart which we use to help people, as well as animals. When will people stop repeating that we cannot do one until we have settled the other? And isn't that a catch 22? People hurt animals yet we should not help animals until we have helped every person.....』
(Enough!) 『OK! I've been hit over the head with the sledgehammer of righteous, morality. I get it, Mr. Foer. If I choose to eat that sirloin burger, I will have to eat it while being burdened with a guilt of biblical proportions. At seventy years old I have tried to eat a fresh, wholesome and healthy diet, one that protects me from high blood pressure, and my husband from more cardiac problems. And I mean, a healthy diet - I make sure of it. I bought Mr. Foer's book because I feel strongly about food quality, and wanted more education on our food supply. After three blood-dripping chapters, I felt my very human-ness under attack because I had these taste-tingling urges for grilled salmon and roasted pork tenderloin. I am happy the author and his wife are adopting a vegetarian diet. But please, spare me the guilt-producing, twist-the-knife rhetoric. I will continue to fight against processed food, and fight for eating more fruits and vegetables. But I refuse to subject myself to the guts and gore you so very specifically articulate. I get it that you don't want to eat Lassie, your moral equivalent to eating animals. But please know, I just ate some cold, cooked shrimp. I followed it with a romaine salad, with blue cheese, walnuts, and apples. I didn't weep for shame.』
(Confused) 『First, there was Michael Pollan, whose book "The Omnivore's Dilemma," a book I deeply admire, exposed the horrors (and yes, they are horrors) of what is now called "factory farming" and the devastating effects of agribusiness on the American diet. And there was Barbara Kingsolver, whose chatty family experiment in local eating ("Animal, Vegetable, Miracle") popularized the notion of growing your own or at least patronizing the local farmer's market. Now there is Jonathan Safran Foer, who deploys his considerable literary gifts against factory farming of every kind (pork, poultry, and fish, primarily, Pollan having already covered beef). Foer is a recent convert to vegetarianism and to philosophical ideas about animal rights. He proselytizes with a convert's zeal, beginning with a clever Swiftian analysis of why it might be as acceptable to eat dogs as it is to eat chicken. His depictions of giant crowded poultry houses, of sprawling hog farms and their lagoons of manure, of the tons of discarded "bycatch" of fishing trawlers are riveting and utterly appalling.
This is also a deeply confused book. On the one hand, Foer is drawn to the absolutist position: it is never acceptable to eat animals. Farming, he feels, even humane family farming, must inevitably inflict pain, if only at slaughter, so one must always abstain. This position, however, is never explored deeply, only stated, again and again. Foer never clearly says whether he is a vegetarian or a vegan, although logic would require the latter. He briefly discusses egg layers (and their inevitable byproduct, male layer chickens) He does not discuss dairy farming (and its inevitable byproduct, male calves). What to do with those male chickens and calves? Does he eschew leather, a byproduct of cattle slaughter? He does not say. Furthermore, he includes sympathetic portraits of a number of small scale farmers whose treatment of animals seems admirable, although they always fail Foer's standard of "no pain should be inflicted, not ever." Occasionally, he retreats even from his measured admiration, as when he takes a gratuitous slap at Joel Salatin, the poultry farmer Pollan admires in "Omnivore." He cannot bring himself to say, as Pollan does, that eating as little meat as possible and seeking out humanely raised meat might be a good idea for some. Instead, he draws (offensive, I thought) parallels between the civil rights movement and the animal rights movement.
The book held my attention until about the halfway point, when it ran out of gas and began to recycle its arguments. This is a book heavily dependent on book learning (copious notes), as opposed to the work of someone who had spent considerable time on a farm or around animals (undercover PETA expeditions excluded). It is, one could say, an urban book by an urban author for an urban audience that surely needs a good shake as it reaches for the package of cheap Tyson chicken thighs at the Fairway. I'm all for any author who can get people to think about--and hopefully rebel against--the unhealthful and cruel practices of factory farms. But if one can never inflict pain on an animal, what am I to do when hornworms devour my (organic) tomato crop or potato beetles defoliate the potatoes? Foer is eloquent when he discusses the nervous systems of fish. He doesn't say anything about insects.』
(Some people need meat despite the issues surround it.) 『First off, I didn't read the book but I've read a lot about it. I tried to give it a neutral review. I whole heartedly think factory farming is awful and wish I could avoid it all costs. However vegetarianism/veganism didn't help my health at all and I found that meat/animal protein profoundly helped me recover from various health issues. Again, I know that factory farming is nasty and local farms are the way to go etc... I wish I could be a vegan, but when it comes to my health and well being vs the treatment of animals I choose MY health over a cow's any day.』
(Not as juicy as an inch thick sirloin burger) 『I initially bought this book thinking it was a cookbook.
Whoa! Was I wrong!!
The Ulinovs are ardent vegans, mind you, but we do like to grill a few steaks, burgers or hot dogs every other day. Otherwise, it is strictly chicken, fish or elk. So we do empathize with Foer's vegetarian sympathies.
Then again, have you ever heard a carrot scream? No?! Well, perhaps our limited human ears are not attuned to their emotional outcries! Have some sympathy. We force those little tubers into the ground and often cage them in to prevent them from being cannibalized by bunny rabbits or being stalked by celery.
One of the things that Foer doesn't address is why animals want to eat us and what we can do to stop that. I had a goat start licking my hand the other day and although I initially thought it was a sign of affection, I quickly realized that she was basting me after I got a quick nip on the fingers. Ouch! Good thing that we have the opposable digits on our hands!! And I will give up eating animals when crocodiles stop eating babies. Deal? I'm pretty sure that if I dropped dead at home, my dogs would come over and comfort me but the cat will think of me as nothing more than a big mouse and start the feast.
(By the way, I recently found out that hot dogs do not actually come from dogs. I'm not sure where they come from, but my neighbor down the highway assured me that it is not dogs after asking if I could sausage-ize his Old Yeller.)』 『 Jonathan Safran Foer spent much of his teenage and college years oscillating between omnivore and vegetarian. But on the brink of fatherhood-facing the prospect of having to make dietary choices on a child's behalf-his casual questioning took on an urgency His quest for answers ultimately required him to visit factory farms in the middle of the night, dissect the emotional ingredients of meals from his childhood, and probe some of his most primal instincts about right and wrong. Brilliantly synthesizing philosophy, literature, science, memoir and his own detective work,Eating Animalsexplores the many fictions we use to justify our eating habits-from folklore to pop culture to family traditions and national myth-and how such tales can lull us into a brutal forgetting. Marked by Foer's profound moral ferocity and unvarying generosity, as well as the vibrant style and creativity that made his previous books,Everything is IlluminatedandExtremely Loud and Incredibly Close, widely loved,Eating Animalsis a celebration and a reckoning, a story about the stories we've told-and the stories we now need to tell. 』
price:$13.58
Penguin Audio
Usually ships in 24 hours Core2Duoノートレビュー 's review (Ok) 『Umm you can watch a movie that is on the web that covers all the info that's in this book. I understand that we need to eat more sustainable products, and that we should stay clear of GMO food products. this book was a waist of money, and the info enclosed in its covers is readily available on the web. Any foodie should already know the information that is in this book. I'm a chef, and I guess this is a good read for a high school kid that's interested in the negative effects of humanity on the environment pertaining to food sources. I thought this book was more of a historical reference to the concepts behind the multiple course meal, I was wrong, hence forth the reason that I'm giving it 2 stars.』
(Mostly fascinating with occasional flights into silliness) 『When the author is explaining the food chain, he's well-informed, specific, and highly entertaining. Every now and then, he lapses into deeply silly philosophical mode, particularly when he's trying to grapple with the reality of killing animals for food (whether by hunting or in the slaughterhouse), something his pampered urban upbringing has made it nearly impossible for him to do. So I could have used an editor's services in cutting out about 90% of his repetitive agonizing over whether he can actually bring himself to eat a chicken he helped slaughter or a pig he shot in the woods. But, boy, when he finally gets out of that rut and goes back to describing the intricacies of the food chain, is he ever wonderful. The first section, about the prevalence of corn in the industrial food chain, is an eye-opener. Another section, about Joel Salatin's fascinating experiment in sustainable agriculture in the Shenandoah Valley, is worth the whole book. Even the hunting-and-gathering section, which suffers most from his tendency to maunder, is stuffed full of goodies about things like mushroom cycles of life.』
(Fantastic Food reading) 『This is a great read, it has made me very thoughtful of what I eat and where my food comes from. The run down of how much corn or things that ate corn or used to be part of corn are in fast food was very mind opening. Drink all the soda you think you are going to want for a while before you read is my only advice.』
(Excellent! A Must Read!!) 『I really enjoyed this book. I learned a lot about, well, corn--the economics, the health issues and the politics all involved in growing and selling corn. I thought this book was well researched and I think that Mr. Pollen did a great job of truly involving himself in the experience. I mean, he spent a week, busting his butt on the farm, living and working with a complete stranger who, although well meaning, is a bit out of the bell curve.
I have to agree with another review regarding the meat. I am a non-red meat eater but I do eat poultry, eggs, and dairy. I didn't think that he was as sensitive as he could have been to those that choose a vegan or vegetarian lifestyle.
I would highly recommend this book. I can't wait to read the Botany of Desire.』
(This book may change your life.) 『Although occasionally sections of this book got a little bogged down and dragged a bit for me, overall it was very fascinating, at times horrifying, and frequently wittily entertaining. Pollan explores three main styles or methods of producing a meal: modern industrialized farming, as currently practiced in America, sustainable agriculture based on pasturing livestock, etc., as practiced on Polyface Farm in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, and hunter/gatherer food production. If a book based on that premise doesn't sound like it could hold your attention and be entertaining, think again.』 『The bestselling author ofThe Botany of Desireexplores the ecology of eating to unveil why we consume what we consume in the twenty-first century.
price:$12.42
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Usually ships in 24 hours Core2Duoノートレビュー 's review (Enjoy, but beware) 『Timothy Egan is a talented writer, and his book doesn't lack drama or excitement. THE BIG BURN grippingly recounts the events surrounding the Great Fire of 1910, including the response of the federal government through Theodore Roosevelt and Gifford Pinchot, and it offers an interesting snapshot of American life in the early twentieth century. All in all, it's a great story, nicely told. But . . . as a work of historical scholarship, the book has the weaknesses typical of "popular history." There is a good bit of supposing and psychologizing, of quotations that sound oddly modern. While Egan includes some citations at the back, the text is not footnoted, so it's difficult to trace the provenance of any particular piece of information, let alone the quotes.
I wouldn't necessarily recommend against reading the book because of these flaws. I would just say to read it primarily for pleasure and avoid taking every last detail as historical fact (which is probably good advice for reading almost any work of history).』
(A fascinating story about one of our lesser known disasters) 『The Big Burn is a fascinating story of one of our lesser known disasters. While forest fires are big news now and we see the dramatic footage of planes and fire crews working to contain the fires, none of that was around in 1910 when this fire took place. The damage done was tremendous and the victory was in some senses a Pyrrhic one. Timothy Egan does a wonderful job of setting the stage for this terrible event, describing it in graphic detail and then following up with the reader.
Egan does a great job of telling us how the policy adopted after the fire did help to save our national forests but the idea of fighting every fire caused terrible fires in the 1980's up to today. He offers a simple and compelling story that makes the book a page turner and one easy to understand. My only concern is that he pushes the stories of the survivors at the expense of those who perished and I do think that weakens his story. Other than that I highly recommend this story.』
(Nowhere near as good as expected) 『I read a magazine review about this book that praised it to the skies. Unfortunately, it was nowhere near my expectations after reading that review. The book covered an amazingly interesting era in American history--the Roosevelt years. However, in my opinion the book was a little bit too one-sided regarding Roosevelt himself (and I am an admirer of his). All of the writing related to Roosevelt seemed very one-dimensional. I get it: Roosevelt was good, Taft was bad.
Moving on, the description of the fire was repetitive and at times confusing. The story of the fire was told from several different locations in the forest(s), but unfortunately the characters that were supposed to demarcate the stories were not compelling enough for me to differentiate between the forest locations or even the characters themselves. Therefore, the scenes from the fire seemed to drag on far too long. I believe that if an editor would've cut about 100 pages from this book it would have been eminently more readable.
I give it three stars because it does deliver useful information about the beginnings of the forest service; however, I was not impressed with the story-telling at all. With all of the luminous and eccentric characters of the time, the book had the potential to be far more compelling than it was.』
(Not Convincing at all) 『I just heard an interview Egan, which left me less than likely to read this book. While it at first sounded interesting, the more the author spoke, the less interested I was. He claimed the fire in 1910 had a huge and negative impact on the US Forestry Service. When pressed by the interviewer he couldn't really come up with anything concrete. This sounded very much like wanting to make something that wasn't there. No doubt the 1910 had a huge impact on the Forestry Service, but I doubt a negative one. Furthermore he kept claiming that Roosevelt had initiated this conversion of public land into Federally owned forest land, making the assertion that it was unowned. Not to belabor the point, but it had been owned by various American Indian tribes, whose possession of the land had been eradicated by the US government. In fact, the author kept up the ongoing American love affair with Roosevelt, who would today be called a supporter of genocide. It was, after all, Roosevelt who said that the American Indian should be wiped out and that their lands all converted into national parks. The final nail in the coffin was that while recounting the conversion of land into Federal land he tried to recall the date of the Louisiana Purchase, completed in 1803, and couldn't do it. What all this says to me that he has probably not done his homework and written an engaging book that involves Roosevelt (always good for book sales) but doesn't really have much of a story to tell.』
(Warm but not hot enough) 『The Station fire that got so much attention this summer took two weeks to burn about 200,000 acres. The "Big Burn" in 1910 wiped out 3 million acres in two days - about 100 times more intense.
If only Timothy Egan's retelling matched the event.
The 1910 fire wasn't especially deadly. The Triangle Shirtwaist factory fire in Manhattan less than six months later killed more people. But both had lasting political effects.
The factory fire gave a boost to the union movement. The Big Burn, according to Egan, saved the Forest Service and, in a more profound sense, ratified a new view by Americans of their national endowment.
The first half of "The Big Burn" is slow going. It tells how Teddy Roosevelt, an accidental president if there ever was one, imposed, briefly, his notions of conservation on a Republican Party that before and since has been devoted to looting the public lands.
Egan's retelling is impressionistic rather than precise, with saints (John Muir, the publicist), sinners (Senator Weldon Heyburn, the lumber operator) and prophets in the wilderness (Gifford Pinchot, first head of the Forest Service). Interesting personalities all, but they are more caricatures than real people in Egan's retelling, especially the villains.
The story demands to be set in a national frame - there was a lot more to Teddy's Progressivism than trees - but Egan fails to do that. He does not, for example, mention the Triangle Shirtwaist fire.
His history of the fire itself is more satisfying although, again, Egan sets it in a small frame.
The fire raged through the Bitterroots of Idaho, but it also devastated other states and part of Canada. Egan limits himself to one valley - which he fails to describe thoroughly - and a handful of personalities.
Again, we have a saint (Ed Pulaski, whose name is attached to the firefighters' tool), a sinner (Ralph Debitt, a cowardly ranger) and a prophet (Bill Weigle, a Forest Service supervisor). These characters are more sympathetic to Egan and seem more real, less stand-ins for political movements.
There are plenty of other arresting players, too: a regiment of black cavalrymen, a pair of immigrants from Italy, a football star turned ranger. As far as it goes, this is a good story. Egan just doesn't carry it far enough.
"The Big Burn" is worth reading anyway, although the reader will have to supply some of his own facts to flesh it out - like the ascendancy of James Watt under the presidency of Ronald Reagan, contradicting Egan's blithe romance about how the fire taught America to reverence its natural inheritance.
The treatment by the government of the men who served it was shameful and is worth knowing about. Egan does treat this aspect of the story adequately.
In fact, there is a lot more about the Big Burn worth knowing than Egan puts into this interesting but superficial history.』 『On the afternoon of August 20, 1910, a battering ram of wind moved through the drought-stricken national forests of Washington, Idaho, and Montana, whipping the hundreds of small blazes burning across the forest floor into a roaring inferno that jumped from treetop to ridge as it raged, destroying towns and timber in the blink of an eye. Forest rangers had assembled nearly ten thousand men — college boys, day workers, immigrants from mining camps — to fight the fire. But no living person had seen anything like those flames, and neither the rangers nor anyone else knew how to subdue them.
Egan narrates the struggles of the overmatched rangers against the implacable fire with unstoppable dramatic force. Equally dramatic is the larger story he tells of outsized president Teddy Roosevelt and his chief forester, Gifford Pinchot. Pioneering the notion of conservation, Roosevelt and Pinchot did nothing less than create the idea of public land as our national treasure, owned by and preserved for every citizen. The robber barons fought Roosevelt and Pinchot’s rangers, but the Big Burn saved the forests even as it destroyed them: the heroism shown by the rangers turned public opinion permanently in their favor and became the creation myth that drove the Forest Service, with consequences still felt in the way our national lands are protected — or not — today.』 『Amazon Best of the Month, October 2009:When Theodore Roosevelt vacated the Oval Office, he left a vast legacy of public lands under the stewardship of the newly created Forest Service. Immediately, political enemies of the nascent conservation movement chipped away at the foundations of the untested agency, lobbying for a return of the land to private interests and development. Then, in 1910, several small wildfires in the Pacific Northwest merge into one massive, swift, and unstoppable blaze, and the Forest Service is pressed into a futile effort to douse the flames. Over 100 firefighters died heroically, galvanizing public opinion in favor of the forests--with unexpected ramifications exposed in today's proliferation of destructive fires. Just as he recounted the Dust Bowl experience inThe Worst Hard Time(a National Book Award winner), The Big Burnvividly recreates disaster through the eyes of the men and women who experienced it (though this time without the benefit of first-hand accounts). It's another incredible--and incredibly compelling--feat of historical journalism. --Jon Foro
Amazon Exclusive Essay: "The Ghosts of 1910" by Timothy Egan, Author ofThe Big Burn
Nearly a hundred years ago, a big piece of Rocky Mountain high country fell to a fire that has never been matched--in size, ferocity, or how it changed the country. I was drawn to this fire in part because of its mythic status among my fellow Westerners. But I was reluctant to try and tell this story because everyone who had lived through it had gone to their grave. WithThe Worst Hard Time, I could look into the eyes of people who survived the Dust Bowl and hear their stories--firsthand. They were happy to pass them on. I was the baton.
WithThe Big Burn, the stories would have to come from ghosts. That fire burned 3 million acres and five towns to the ground in the hot sweep of a single weekend. It also killed nearly a hundred people. So, my task was to listen to the dead--those Italian and Irish immigrant firefighters in their letters home, those first forest rangers in memories collected in volumes stashed away in mountain towns, and in the notes and diaries of two great men who founded the Forest Service. One, Teddy Roosevelt, is a voice that lives nearly as loud today as when he bestrode the world stage. The other, Gifford Pinchot, was less known, but his legacy, like that of Roosevelt, is everywhere in the public land that Americans now claim as a birthright. And what’s more, Pinchot himself was married to a ghost for nearly 20 years, one of the more fascinating things I found in the haunt of the Big Burn.
President Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir atop Glacier Point in Yosemite National Park
Ranger Ed Pulaski, whose actions saved many lives
Ranger Joe Halm after the fire. Like Ranger Pulaski, he helped save many lives
Men standing amid downed timber after the Big Burn of 1910
Young Gifford Pinchot, a close friend and personal aide of Roosevelt’s and the first Chief of the U.S. Forest Service
A ForestService fire patrol in 1914
A Q&A with Timothy Egan
Q:Tell us something about that great fire.A:Well, it was the largest wildfire in American history, based on size. In less than two days, it torched more than three million acres, burned five towns to the ground, and killed nearly one hundred people.Q:Wow. How big is three million acres?A:Imagine if the entire state of Connecticut burned in a weekend--that's what you have here.Q:And yet in your subtitle you call this the fire that saved America.A:That's right. This happened in August 1910--next year will be the one hundredth anniversary. It came just after Teddy Roosevelt had left office, and left a legacy of public land nearly the size of France. But after Roosevelt was gone from Washington, in 1909, the Forest Service, the stewards of his legacy, came under attack. Gilded Age money wanted the rangers gone, the land placed in private hands. Enemies in Congress were constantly sniping at the young agency. And people out west were suspicious of the value of“Teddy's green rangers,” as they called them. They thought they were all college boys, softies, city kids.Q:So how did the fire change that image?A:It made heroes--almost mythic heroes--of the young men who led platoons of firefighters into a sea of flames. The government had marshaled ten thousand people, an army of young men, immigrants, and volunteers, to fight the fire. It was the first large-scale effort to battle a wildfire in U.S. history. The big-city daily newspapers here and abroad covered it like a war. The firefighters failed, because the Big Burn was so big and moved so quickly. But they succeeded in one respect: it turned the tide of public opinion, and Roosevelt's“Great Crusade” was saved. But at an awful cost. Those men should never have died. The fire was a once-in-a-century force of nature, and nothing could have stopped it.Q:How so?A:The fire moved faster than a horse at full gallop. It's been estimated that it consumed enough trees to build a city the size of Chicago. And it burned at nearly 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit in spots, incinerating the ground down to bedrock. No army of bedraggled men with shovels and picks could stop that.Q:After writing a book about the Dust Bowl, what drew you to a fire from 1910?A:I guess I'm working my way through the elements, going from dust to fire! Narrative history, basically just storytelling, is such a thrill to develop. You relive several lives through this drama. You inhabit their time. LikeThe Worst Hard Time, this book follows a dual-track story and several real-life people through this event.Q:How did you hear about the Great Fire?A:I've heard about the Big Burn since I was a little kid, camping in Montana and Idaho with my family. It had this larger-than-life status. And then, as a New York Times reporter covering the West and many wildfires, I found that this fire was a sacred text.Q:What surprised you about the story?A:I think it was Voltaire who said history never repeats itself, but man always does. As with the story I tried to tell inThe Worst Hard Time, here you have a classic tale of human beings against nature. Hubris plays a huge role. In the end, nature wins, of course. Nature always bats last, as they said after the Bay Area earthquake that disrupted the World Series.Q:What else came as a surprise?A:I was hugely impressed with Roosevelt and his chief forester, a very strange and original American now nearly lost to our history named Gifford Pinchot. These were two easterners, born into wealth, who crusaded a century ago for the Progressive Era idea that a democracy and public land were inextricably linked. They always talked about land belonging to“the little guy.” It was a radical idea then, at a time when the gulf between the rich and poor was never greater. Roosevelt and Pinchot were both traitors to their class, in that sense. And both were--how to say this--odd people.Q:What do you mean by that?A:I mean it in a positive sense. They went skinny-dipping together in the Potomac, boxed and wrestled, climbed rocks and rode horses through Rock Creek Park, all while at the pinnacle of power, while hatching these conservation ideals. And Pinchot, the founding forester, on top of everything else, was married to a ghost--a dead woman, a true spiritual union--for nearly twenty years.Q:What was that all about?A:He was a quirky guy, very smart but also very spiritual.Q:And Teddy Roosevelt, did he live up to the image carved on Mount Rushmore?A:More so. He was such a...multitasker! A presidential polymorph! He wrote something like fifteen books before the age of forty. He climbed the Matterhorn after doctors told him he was doomed to a sickly, indoors life. And he took on the entrenched, powerful moguls and politicians of the Gilded Age.Q:So the story you tell is really two stories, as you mentioned earlier: the founding of American conservation and how this fire saved it?A:Precisely. I'm always interested in the collision between man and nature. But again, what struck me as unusual in this case was how the collision preserved something bigger, more lasting--the idea of conservation itself.Q:So the fire was a good thing?A:I don't think the families who lost their loved ones would say that. I try to focus on five or so people who faced this beast on the ground. You know, history is not always about Great Men. It's also about people in the margins, who rarely get recognition, who make it turn. And in this case, you had some Italian and Irish immigrants, a tough female homesteader, some African-American soldiers, some brave and young forest rangers--all of whom were heroes, as important to how this fire changed history as were Roosevelt and Pinchot.Q:Aside from the conservation legacy, why is a fire from a hundred years ago important today?A:We're entering an age of catastrophic wildfires, so the experts say. Big parts of the West will burn over the next decade. In those forests you have all this fuel built up: dead and dying trees. The land wants to burn, perhaps needs to burn. A big part of the reason why goes back to the Big Burn. I don't want to give away a story twist, but you’ll see late in the book that another lesson--perhaps tragic, certainly misguided--was taken away from the Big Burn. It's with us in a very big way.Q:How, specifically?A:We're seeing bigger, hotter, longer, earlier wildfires around the country today, and much of them can be traced to the wrong lessons of the Big Burn. Firefighting now accounts for nearly half of the Forest Service budget. This was not what Roosevelt had in mind. 』
price:$7.06
Plume
Usually ships in 24 hours Core2Duoノートレビュー 's review (Understocked) 『This book lacked the detail I was expecting. It was a good outline. I found myself flipping through most of it. I'm very glad I got it from my library versus buying it. I found it impractical for the masses. More detailed information can be found on the internet for free.』
(hope for the best, prepare for the worst) 『If you have any concerns about bad things happening and want to be prepared for most anything. This is the book you want to have to get yourself ready. It covers all the things you need to think about to make sure you have food, water and ammo you or your family will need during an emergency.』
(Detailed and Important Information) 『This book is a very detailed and concise lesson on prepardness. The author breaks the steps down into major topics then goes into detail not only explaining what you need, but why you need it. You could go out and buy several books to get the information that is contained in this one book.
Post Katrina, it is clear to the enlightened, that everyone has a responsibility to care for their families and their neighbors. This book is a "cheat sheet" for prepardness.
There will always be those who live in denial and refuse to believe that disaster, natural or man-made, can happen to them. Because of that denial they have to attack this book and those who agree with it's message to preserve their illusion.
They will be the ones standing on their roof's yelling "help me" to overwhelmed or non-existent resources.』
(Great Resource) 『Great read... easy to follow, written for a neophyte with information an expert can use. One of the best survival/prepping books I've read. This is the technical side of "Patriots"...』
(James wesley Rawles) 『Rawles does it again! A superb book on finding the right mindset and equipment for being prepared.』 『The definitive guide on how to prepare for any crisis--from global financial collapse to a pandemic
It would only take one unthinkable event to disrupt our way of life. If there is a terrorist attack, a global pandemic, or sharp currency devaluation--you may be forced to fend for yourself in ways you've never imagined. Where would you get water? How would you communicate with relatives who live in other states? What would you use for fuel?
Survivalist expert James Wesley, Rawles, author ofPatriotsand editor of SurvivalBlog.com, shares the essential tools and skills you will need for you family to survive, including:
Water:Filtration, transport, storage, and treatment options. Food Storage:How much to store, pack-it-yourself methods, storage space and rotation, countering vermin. Fuel and Home Power:Home heating fuels, fuel storage safety, backup generators. Garden, Orchard Trees, and Small Livestock:Gardening basics, non-hybrid seeds, greenhouses; choosing the right livestock. Medical Supplies and Training:Building a first aid kit, minor surgery, chronic health issues. Communications:Following international news, staying in touch with loved ones. Home Security:Your panic room, self-defense training and tools. When to Get Outta Dodge:Vehicle selection, kit packing lists, routes and planning. Investing and Barter:Tangibles investing, building your barter stockpile. And much more.
How to Survive the End of the World as We Know Itis a must-have for every well-prepared family.
price:$20.75
Knopf
Usually ships in 24 hours Core2Duoノートレビュー 's review (America's Parks) 『This is a magnificent book; I first loaned it to a 92 year-old friend who is going to order her own copy. She has visited many of the parks, enjoyed the television show by Ken Burns and remembers the Depression and the CCC. Kathy』
(Great look and read!) 『A book that will not only make you appreciate America's Greateesst natural treasures but give you a perspective that will effecct every nature walk or vacation you will ever take!』
(National Parks: A Real Treasure) 『Ken Burns has put together the face of America. He has a knack with the Civil war and Baseball, to see the impact that these subjects have to Americans and all people. Having been to the parks, he has identified the greatness of nature.hHe also sees how it impacts us all. It is truly a Gem!』
(The National Parks) 『Anyone with a passion for the outdoors, our national parks, or photography will value this superb historical and photographic record of our national parks system. For a documentary, the book reads easily. I found myself wanting to continue reading on and on. I found the book more interesting than the TV series that aired shortly after its release. The photographs range from wonderful old sepias from the early days of photography to modern color images of today. I understand why the parks are not discussed in an orderly fashion, one park at a time - the book covers the development of the park system rather than one park at a time as a travel book might. The perspectives and details of the individuals who influenced the national park system emphasizes how individual people shape our society and make things happen through the influence of relationships. While it would be easier to negotiate the book if it were organized park by park, the impact of the book would be lost. Kudos to Dayton Duncan and Ken Burns. This book is a keeper.』
(the national parks) 『ordered it as a christmas gift for my sister. received it really fast and in great condition. thank you』 『The companion volume to the twelve-hour PBS series from the acclaimed filmmaker behindThe Civil War, Baseball,andThe War
America’s national parks spring from an idea as radical as the Declaration of Independence: that the nation’s most magnificent and sacred places should be preserved, not for royalty or the rich, but for everyone. In this evocative and lavishly illustrated narrative, Ken Burns and Dayton Duncan delve into the history of the park idea, from the first sighting by white men in 1851 of the valley that would become Yosemite and the creation of the world’s first national park at Yellowstone in 1872, through the most recentadditions to a system that now encompasses nearly four hundred sites and 84 million acres.
The authors recount the adventures, mythmaking, and intense political battles behind the evolution of the park system, and the enduringideals that fostered its growth. They capture the importance and splendors of the individual parks: from Haleakala in Hawaii to Acadia in Maine, from Denali in Alaska to the Everglades in Florida, from Glacier in Montana to Big Bend in Texas. And they introduce us to a diverse cast of compelling characters—both unsung heroes and famous figures such as John Muir, Theodore Roosevelt, and Ansel Adams—who have been transformed by these special places and committed themselves to saving them from destruction so that the rest of us could be transformed as well.
The National Parksis a glorious celebration of an essential expression of American democracy.』 『Amazon Exclusive: Joseph J. Ellis ReviewsThe National Parks
Educated at the College of William and Mary and Yale University, Joseph J. Ellis is a Ford Foundation Professor of History at Mount Holyoke College. HisFounding Brotherswon the Pulitzer Prize in 2001, andAmerican Sphinxearned the 1997 National Book Award. His latest work,American Creation, was published in 2007. Read Ellis's exclusive Amazon guest review ofThe National Parks: America's Best Idea:
If Ken Burns’s upcoming documentary film on America’s National Parks is as good as the book laying open before me, he has another huge winner. Of course the book, entitledThe National Parks: America’s Best Idea, is intended as a companion to the film, but as I see it--literally--the book permits the eye and mind to linger over the truly breathtaking pictures in a more meditative way that film does not allow. The result is almost elegiac, producing the same kind of goose bumps that Burns created in his early work on the Brooklyn Bridge and the Civil War.
Burns has been chronicling the American experience for over thirty years, and I think it’s fair to say that no one has influenced more living Americans to think about our history as a people and a nation. His dominant themes have been space and race, his persistent question deceptively simple: who are we? I thinkThe National Parksis his masterpiece on the space theme. And the message that kept whispering to me in these pages was that whoever we are has been decisively shaped by the sheer physicality of the continent we inhabit.
It never occurred to me before, but Americans invented the idea institutionalized in our National Parks. Namely, as Burns puts it in the introduction,“for the first time in human history, land--great sections of our natural landscape--was set aside, not for kings or noblemen or the very rich, but for everyone, for all time.” As Wallace Stegner once observed, and the book’s subtitle echoes, this may have been “America’s best idea.” Burns links the idea to Jefferson’s magic words in the Declaration of Independence (i.e. “We hold these truths...”), our quasi-sacred text on human freedom, which takes on an almost spiritual resonance amidst the vistas of Yosemite or Yellowstone.
Dayton Duncan, Burns's longtime colleague, has provided most of the text, which is designed to cast a spell that matches the wonder of the stunning illustrations. The book looks luxurious and feels expensive, but this visit to the National Parks is a great deal.--Joseph J. Ellis
price:$12.42
Rodale Books
Usually ships in 24 hours Core2Duoノートレビュー 's review (nice try) 『If comedy is your thing, take a gander. The real crisis is the way Al decides to live his posh life flying around the globe, supported by duped souls convinced of his very selective twisted *science*. Heck, I'd photoshop the cover too--it's right in keeping with the hushed facts that somehow never make it into his amazing work. Your choice: if you want a good laugh to go with those awesome doomsday flicks, by all means, read up.』
(He's made a billion dollars from the suckers) 『There are reliable estimates that Al Gore, with his 10,000 square foot mansion that has an electric bill of $2400 a month has made a billion dollars from his panicky tripe. The world is going to end within five years, or so he's been saying since the late 80s.
He proposes using geothermal energy from the mantle (Which he claims is "millions of degrees," though it's actually a few hundred). Yes, instead of CO2, just vent heat and water vapor (a significantly more potent greenhouse gas than CO2) into the atmosphere to reduce "Warming." Brilliant.
This is an Oscar-winning scientist, who flew out to Copenhagen to pick up his Nobel Peace Prize, in a private jet, burning several hundred pounds of Jet A fuel per hour.
Such concern for the environment, and such amazing intellect, from the man who swiped the CGI glacier collapse from the movie "That Day After Tomorrow," plugged it into his "documentary," and claimed it was an actual event.
He's as honest as he is brilliant, and his followers as rational as they are sober.
Utter garbage.』
(Our Choice) 『Our Choice is full of good sound information about our choices to save our earth. I am a pediatrician and realize it is one of the most important issues for the health of our children and grandchlidren. I ordered copies to give to each child at Christmas as I think it is an important book. James E Jones MD』
(Falsehoods abound even on the book cover) 『The old adage, "You can't judge a book by its cover," not withstanding, the book jacket/cover of this book is a Photoshop fraud. Photos showing four coincidental hurricanes had to be faked for the simple reason that since the late 1990s there has been a shortage of hurricanes to make his point. Notice that the hurricane hovering off the east coast of Florida is rotating in a clock-wise, and physically impossible, direction for a hurricane in the northern hemisphere. Gore, so quick to set everyone straight on the idea of global climate change should know better than that. Cuba with its 6000+ foot mountains, and Baja California with its 10,000+ mountains are shown completely submerged by rising sea levels.
In a case like this one where the author is doing his best to panic the world into believing his spew, it probably IS safe to begin your skepticism of a book's contents by studying its cover. The cover is at the very least a warning of lies to come.
It's amazing that Gore couldn't even get his book cover facts right, or maybe it was done on purpose so he can sit back and laugh at all the readers who paid good money to fall for his lies. Money that he can use to continue is carnivorous, multi-mansion, private jetting lifestyle while he tells YOU that YOU must change your lifestyle to save the planet.』
(The Smartest Man Alive is Back Alive! Totally Convincing, Totally Really Scary!) 『Dr. Al Gore has finally done it. The inventor of the internet, discoverer of weather and pioneer of the modern American strip club, Gore has finally convinced the once ignorant masses that we ARE the cause of global warming. How does he know? I don't know, look at all the charts and stuff. He really knows what he's talking about.
Then you look at the cover. It's got FOUR - yes, four - hurricanes on it! Look people, you keep driving around in your SUV's, going to work, feeding your children, using lights and computers and those four hurricanes can easily turn into 20 hurricanes at once! How do I know? Al Gore is one of the smartest scientists out there, thats how!
There's even a great practical section on what you can do. Not just for yourself or your planet destroying children but for the whole universe. Turning off appliances not in use, using only one square of toilet paper (Yes, one. Even for number two!), reducing your daily TV watching from 6 hours down to 5, disposing of your least favorite child(with a great pictorial how-to)and my favorite, abolishing dinner.
This is the final warning until the next one. But you never know, this next one or the next, next one could be your last. Unless there's another. Do you really want to take that chance?
』 『
It is now abundantly clear that we have at our fingertips all of the tools we need to solve the climate crisis. The only missing ingredient is collective will.Properly understood, the climate crisis is an unparalleled opportunity to finally and effectively address many persistent causes of suffering and misery that have long been neglected, and to transform the prospects of future generations, giving them a chance to live healthier, more prosperous lives as they continue their pursuit of happiness.Our Choicegathers in one place all of the most effective solutions that are available now and that, together, will solve this crisis. It is meant to depoliticize the issue as much as possible and inspire readers to take action—not only on an individual basis but as participants in the political processes by which every country, and the world as a whole, makes the choice that now confronts us.There is an old African proverb that says, "If you want to go quickly, go alone; if you want to go far, go together."We have to go far, quickly.We can solve the climate crisis. It will be hard, to be sure, but if we can make the choice to solve it, I have no doubt whatsoever that we can and will succeed.—AL GORE, from the introduction
price:$8.84
Broadway
Usually ships in 24 hours Core2Duoノートレビュー 's review (Worth the Climb) 『Ed Viesturs has written a very good book on the history of climbing the world's second tallest mountain, K2.
Viesturs is very workmanlike in his prose and factual in his delivery. He avoids the type of self-aggrandizement that can make a reader wonder if a book "about me" is just the good parts (this book is partly about Viesturs, who climbed K2 and learned some valuable lessons). He is self-critical, which also tends to add credibility to a book involving self-reporting.
K2 does not loom large in the public mind, but towers over most other mountains in the minds of those who climb. It is four times deadlier than the storied Everest, technically more difficult and worth more in terms of bragging rights among mountaineers than notching the world's tallest mountain. While three years elapsed between the first and second ascents of Everest, twenty-three elapsed between the first and second conquests of K2.
Viesters traces a chronological history of the early attempts, failures and success of K2 efforts. He spends a significant amount of time on the 1938 and 1939 attempts. Weisner's 1939 attempt came within a couple of hundred feet of the summit but ended in disaster. Viesturs takes apart the expedition for diagnosis of what went wrong. He is not afraid to challenge a lot of prevailing views regarding the deficiencies of the leader, Fritz Weisner, and on the whole I think reaches a different opinion of where blame lays than many who have studied that event.
This is a good book that flows well and is easy to read. If you like mountaineering and adventure books, this is worth the climb.』
(Entertaining read about one of the world's most challenging mountains) 『I first learned of Ed Viesturs from reading Jon Krakauer's "Into Thin Air." At the time I was deeply impressed by his willingness to forgo his long-anticipated plans to make an Imax movie of his own summit attempt in order to help in the rescue and recovery efforts. I remember thinking to myself, "here's a down-to-earth guy with great integrity." After reading K2, that impression has only been strengthened.
Viesturs is one of handful of elite mountaineers active today, but he is so humble in his self-presentation that you wouldn't really know it from reading this book. He's also incredibly knowledgeable about mountain climbing in general and the history of summit attempts on K2 specifically.
After reading his description of the various expeditions, you're left with two primary reactions: (a) a feeling of awe and admiration for the brave men and women who battle such hardship, and confront so many risks, to climb that brutally unforgiving mountain, and (b) a realization that mountaineers are in many other respects just like everybody else... and there are selfish jerks in that community just as there are in sea-level communities. In that regard, the story of the explicit sabotage that took place in one expedition was particularly interesting, if discouraging.
This book is written in an enjoyable, informal style (albeit with an unmistakable "As told to..." tone). While I wish Viesturs had spent more time talking about his own summit, I can understand why he chose not to. I'll just have to head over to his other book about the trip and read that one, too. :) 』
(Great book!) 『This book is awesome, it book puts mountaineering into true perspective. I purchased this book wanting to read about the disastrous 2008 K2 climbing season, and ended up getting so much more; the ambitious scope of this book ranges from climbing history to the current events in mountaineering, and so much more in between. Viesturs really draws you in to what happens on the mountain: how friendships are forged, how teams succeed and how they fail, and every other aspect of the climb. I have long fantasized of climbing in the Himalaya and Karakorum ranges, and though I still want to, this book sheds true light on how it can be, what to expect. This is the best account of mountaineering I have ever read, and as close to a mountaineering bible as I have come. Essential reading for any would-be climber, and also one hell of a book for anyone interested in an engaging read.』
(A detailed history of the world's most dangerous mountain) 『K2 is the world's second highest mountain and statistically the most dangerous. Ed Viesturs, the author, has been to the summit of Everest seven times, but K2 only once, and says he will never go back again. In this book, he gives great insight into why.
K2, much more than Everest, is the ultimate prize in mountaineering. And Viesturs does his best to explain why. The format of the book is roughly 1/3 a personal journal of his expert opinion on the mountain, and 2/3 a history of all the historic expeditions that have gone to the mountain, and their reasons for success or failure. The book suffers at some points from pacing and organizational issues. Viesturs shows that he is a major scholar of mountaineering in addition to being an legendary climber himself. The upside is the level of detail and insight he brings. The downside is that names and references are sometimes thrown around without enough guidance for those of us who are not at the same level of expertise. It feels a bit like the literary equivalent of being lost on an 8000 meter peak in a whiteout without "willow wands" to guide the reader to the next camp. Fortunately a reader can always go back and relocate the story path without the fear of falling off the mountain or freezing to death.
If you were introduced to the world of mountaineering literature by the writings of John Krakauer, this book -while generally solid- does not have the same level of writing flair. If you are a fan of mountaineering literature in general, this definitely belongs on your shelf, and not just because it was written by one of the world's greatest mountaineers.』
(Best Mountaineering Book I Have Ever Read) 『K2: Life and Death.......... is the best mountaineering book I have ever read, and I have been reading them ever since Annapurna (Herzog)which I read shortly after it was published. K2:... seems to me to be the most honest and straight forward. (See particularly page 316) If that is not enough it is an easy and enjoyable read. I have already ordered Vestiers other book (No Short Cuts to the Top) anticipating a similiar enjoyable experience』 『A thrilling chronicle of the tragedy-ridden history of climbing K2, the world's most difficult and unpredictable mountain, by the bestselling authors ofNo Shortcuts to the Top
At 28,251 feet, the world's second-tallest mountain, K2 thrusts skyward out of the Karakoram Range of northern Pakistan. Climbers regard it as the ultimate achievement in mountaineering, with good reason. Four times as deadly as Everest, K2 has claimed the lives of seventy-seven climbers since 1954. In August 2008 eleven climbers died in a single thirty-six-hour period on K2–the worst single-event tragedy in the mountain's history and the second-worst in the long chronicle of mountaineering in the Himalaya and Karakoram ranges. Yet summiting K2 remains a cherished goal for climbers from all over the globe. Before he faced the challenge of K2 himself, Ed Viesturs, oneof the world's premier high-altitude mountaineers, thought of it as "the holy grail of mountaineering."
InK2: Life and Death on the World's Most Dangerous Mountain,Viesturs explores the remarkable history of the mountain and of those who have attempted to conquer it. At the same time he probes K2's most memorable sagas in an attempt to illustrate the lessons learned by confronting the fundamental questions raised by mountaineering–questions of risk, ambition, loyalty to one's teammates, self-sacrifice, and the price of glory. Viesturs knows the mountain firsthand. He and renowned alpinist Scott Fischer climbed it in 1992 and were nearly killed in an avalanche that sent them sliding to almost certain death. Fortunately, Edmanaged to get into a self-arrest position with his ice ax and stop both his fall and Scott' s.
Focusing on seven of the mountain's most dramatic campaigns, from his own troubled ascent to the 2008 tragedy, Viesturs and Roberts crafts an edge-of-your-seat narrative that climbers and armchair travelers alike will find unforgettably compelling. With photographs from Viesturs's personal collection and from historical sources, this is the definitive account of the world's ultimate mountain, and of the lessons that can be gleaned from struggling toward its elusive summit.』 『Amazon Exclusive: Christopher Reich ReviewsK2: Life and Death on the Worlds Most Dangerous Mountain
Christopher Reigh is theNew York Timesbestselling author ofRules of Vengeance,Numbered Account, andThe Patriots Club, which won the International Thiller Writers award for best novel in 2006.
Is there anything more enthralling than a true tale of high adventure well told? Stories about men and women braving impossible odds under daunting conditions in far flung locales, often risking life and limb, keep me glued to the page every time. I’m talking about books likePapillion,Alive,Into Thin AirandThe Perfect Storm. Well, today, I’m happy to add another book to that list.K2: Life and Death on the World’s Most Dangerous Mountainby Ed Viesturs with David Roberts.
K2 is the world’s second tallest mountain. Located in the Karakoram Range in northern Pakistan, it has more than earned its nickname as the "world’s most dangerous mountain." Just a year ago, thirteen climbers lost their lives on the mountain in a single day. A few mountains may have killed a higher ratio of those who have tried to climb them, notably Annapurna, but none combine the danger, lore, and prestige of K2. In Viesturs’ new book, he tells the story of six expeditions to the fabled mountain. Some successful. Some ill-fated. All spellbinding.
First, a word about the author. Ed Viesturs is widely acknowledged to be among the world’s top five living mountaineers. In 2005, he became the first American to summit all fourteen of the world’s 8000 meter peaks. And he did so without supplemental oxygen. (His fine memoir,No Shortcuts to the Top, chronicles that adventure.) To offer but one example of his prodigious skills, Viesturs once climbed 7,000 feet from an altitude of 16,000 feet to 23,000 feet up a near vertical slope in only eight hours. Did I mention he was carrying a forty-pound pack on his back? The man is to mountaineering what Michael Jordan is to basketball. If that is, Michael Jordan had risked losing his life every time he stepped onto the basketball court. Be impressed. Be very impressed.
In K2, Viesturs recounts the most dramatic expeditions to the mountain and he does so in today’s frank and honest terms. Older tellings followed the time honored "gentlemen’s code" of ne’er speaking poorly of one’s climbing partners. To read, "The White Spider," by Heinrich Harrer, the story of the first ascent of the Eiger Nordwand written over fifty years ago, is to believe that anyone who ever strapped on a helmet and a harness was "noble fellow," or a "strong willed lad," whose motivations were as pure as knight seeking the Holy Grail. Viesturs sifts through such rose hued accounts and casts today’s halogen spot light on them. Friendly disagreements amongst climbing pals become knock down, drag out arguments between the fiercest of rivals. Mild discomfort morphs into severe frostbite that costs a man his fingers and toes. And an analysis of where a climber might better have situated an upper altitude camp becomes an indictment of attempted murder. The best exampleis to compare The Green Berets versus Platoon. Both are about Vietnam; but one is quite a bit more realistic than the other. Similarly, Viesturs' modern updating makes for fascinating reading.
In a sense,K2: Life and Death on the World’s Most Dangerous Mountainis a book written by a mountaineer for mountaineers. Afterall, Viesturs is telling the same story over and over again. But that is exactly what lends the book its magic. Though all of the expeditions shared the same goal, each followed its own unique course. In fact, I often felt as if Viesturs were describing a different mountain altogether. The lesson I took away from this outstanding piece of nonfiction is that K2 seemed to somehow alter its very topography to defeat the "strong-willed lads" and "noble fellows" who tried to conquer it.
Core2Duoノートレビュー 's review (3 1/2 stars) 『I might have enjoyed this book more if I hadn't read it right after reading "The Omnivore's Dilemma". That was such a great book that whatever I read next was bound to be a bit of a letdown. Still, it's a good read and has some nice humorous touches. I especially got a kick out of Lily - wish there had been more of her. The negative reviewers are right in that Kingsolver does get a bit preachy at times but not enough to ruin the book. Anyone who is into or interested in the local food movement or gardening in general should enjoy this book.』
(Feel Good Book of the Year) 『I read a lot of non-fiction regarding food politics, farming, etc. Unlike a lot of books that leave you feeling overwhelmed and depressed, this book made me feel warm, inspired, and optimistic. A great look at the positive benefits of getting back to basics when it comes to food. This is a good book to read before Thanksgiving and Christmas as it takes a really positive stance on our food culture surrounding holiday feasts. I kept explaining this book to friends as vegetable gardner porn.』
(Local food 101) 『This is a great book and Kingsolver is a great writer. For all those curious about food/ all apreciators and lovers of food, live vicariously through Kingsolver and her family as they embark upon a year long experiment with living off of the land in upstate new york. It will change the way you view the seasons and your food choices.』
(Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life) 『A book for anyone who is interested in the process of getting off the food pipeline to being as self-sufficient as possible in our global cacophony of food production. Writer Barbara Kingsolver shares the stage in the this fantastic book with her husband and daughter. This is a personal yearly voyage of a family seeking the meaning of real food as an extension of their environment. "Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life" shares potent, relevant and vital information about food production (past and present), "green" networks and nutrition.
Domenico Petrillo, Beacon, NY
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life (P.S.)』
(Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life) 『This book could change your life. Barbara Kingsolver is a wonderfully witty writer who invites you into a year of life as she and her family eat food which is grown locally using sustainable agriculture. Much of the food they grow themselves. In inserts throughout the book, her husband, Steven L. Hopp, contributes pertinent information about various agricultural issues and suggestions for action. In each chapter Barbara's college age daughter, Camille Kingsolver, tells about their cooking experiences and includes recipes. I have never had so much fun learning about what's good for me.』