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Encounters with the Archdruid | 
enlarge | Author: John Mcphee Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux Category: Book
List Price: $15.00 Buy Used: $2.69 You Save: $12.31 (82%)
New (40) Used (107) Collectible (3) from $2.69
Rating: 34 reviews Sales Rank: 19081
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 245 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.5 x 0.7
ISBN: 0374514313 Dewey Decimal Number: 333.720973 EAN: 9780374514310 ASIN: 0374514313
Publication Date: 1980 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Moderate edgewear, some creasing to covers. A very good copy all around.
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Amazon.com Review Born in 1915, the mountaineer and outdoorsman David Brower has arguably been the single most influential American environmentalist in the last half of the 20th century; even his erstwhile foes at the Department of the Interior grudgingly credit him with having nearly single-handedly halted the construction of a dam in the heart of the Grand Canyon, and he has converted thousands, even millions, of his compatriots to the preservationist cause through his work with the Sierra Club, Friends of the Earth, and other organizations. Brower was in the thick of battle when John McPhee profiled him for the New Yorker in a piece that would evolve into Encounters with the Archdruid. McPhee follows Brower into unusually close combat as Brower faces down a geologist who is, it seems, convinced that there is no sight quite so elevating as that of a fully operational mine; a developer who (successfully, it turned out) sought to convert an isolated stretch of the Carolina coast into a resort for the moneyed few--and who provided the title for McPhee's book, wryly opining that conservationists are at heart druids who "sacrifice people and worship trees"; and, most formidable of all, former Interior Secretary Floyd Dominy, who oversaw the construction of a structure that for Brower stands as one of the most hated creations of our time, Glen Canyon Dam on the Colorado River. McPhee offers up an engaging portrait of Brower, a man unafraid of a good fight in the service of the earth, making Encounters an important contribution to the history of the modern environmental movement. --Gregory McNamee
Product Description The narratives in this book are of journeys made in three wildernesses - on a coastal island, in a Western mountain range, and on the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon. The four men portrayed here have different relationships to their environment, and they encounter each other on mountain trails, in forests and rapids, sometimes with reserve, sometimes with friendliness, sometimes fighting hard across a philosophical divide.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 29 more reviews...
conservation or preservation August 26, 2008 I have an environmental background but never bought into the religion. I am not a fan of Brower but I wanted to learn more about him. I gained far more from this book than I had bargained for: McPhee is an amazing journalist, Brower is an interesting guy, and Brower's opponents were just as convicted to their causes.
This is my first McPhee book. In the first few pages, I watched him reveal one of the characters as if he knew him intimately, or designed him in eloquent detail for a novel. It seemed like McPhee really knew these people, and had the ability to let the reader really know these people as well.
The main theme of this book is the difference between conservation and preservation. Do you leave the wilderness alone or do you mine the copper that society depends on? Do you protect the island of the rich and famous, or do you build resorts so kids can visit it? Do you let the river run free for the few who can make it and the rest who are happy to know it's there, or do you dam it for the water and the electricity and the accessability?
What was so beautiful about this book was that each of these people, Brower and his three opponents, all loved the places they were arguing about. They just saw something different. They were all out there to do something good. And often, they would pause, and enjoy the scenery, the moment, the beauty together. It was the connections that gave the contrasts such meaning. It portrayed the struggles many of us have; conserve or preserve?
thought provoking December 29, 2007 Interesting stories that force you to consider both sides of several important environmental issues. Solid writing. Even more interesting because the stories are true.
McPhee's Best Work - Still Relevant Today August 15, 2007 I read this book for the first time 36 years after it was written, yet it seems like it was written today. The battles now have different names but the perspectives are still the same. My conclusion after reading it is that as a species human's have the capacity to view the same scenery and information and come to radically different conclusions; lets build on it or lets preserve it. The fundamental difference seems to be how an individual views the world around us; our surroundings exist to serve us or we an integral part of the world. This dichotomy in thinking may explain why some of us become engineers and real estate developers and others become artists and conservationists.
McPhee's genius in this book was to get the archetypes of those two positions to spend time together in a proposed open pit copper mine in the Cascades, a potential resort in Cumberland Island off the coast of Georgia, and in and around dams along the Colorado River; recording the dialog while describing the landscape. This book is a paean to conservation and one of McPhee's best.
Encounters with the Archdruid January 3, 2007 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
David Brower is a major conservationist who leads many environmental groups. In Encounters with the Archdruid, Brower travels to a mountain, an island, and a river, and has battles with various developers in each of the aareas. In the mountains, he encounters Charles Park, a geologist who is pick-happy. ON the island, he meets Charles Fraser, a developer who wants to build a resort on the island. He also goes fafting with Floyd Dominy, who is bent on building a dam to make a lake out of the end of the river. Brower winds some, and loses some, but for the sake of the enfironment, he never gives up.
Encounters with a bad book January 2, 2007 0 out of 12 found this review helpful
This book is not very interesting. It is very jumpy and hard to understand. There are many enviormental issues that are barely if at all touched on by the author. Characters are over developed and there is to much background information on unimportant characters. Brower is just on big whinner. Overall it is not that good of a book.
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