about this catalog • ecocriticism • environmental history • field guides
Transcription
about this catalog • ecocriticism • environmental history • field guides
• about this catalog • ecocriticism • environmental history • field guides • nature writing & trade nonfiction • philosophy & ethics www.ugapress.org 800-266-5842 about this catalog UGA Press has a long tradition of publishing books about nature and the environment. A rich variety of work has been published over the years, ranging from books of philosophy that are internationally focused to field guides of the Southeast to narrative writing that is both personal and universal. This paperless catalog features almost 150 titles divided into five major subject areas: ecocriticism, environmental history, field guides, nature writing & trade nonfiction, and philosophy & ethics. PDFs are available of the entire catalog and of each section separately. Each section has a separate author index. An order form is also included. If you have questions contact John McLeod [email protected] 706-369-6158 next nature writing & trade nonfiction Belanger, Marion • Everglades 26 Belleville, Bill • Deep Cuba 28 • River of Lakes 28 • Sunken Cities, Sacred Cenotes, and Golden Sharks 28 Briggs, Betty Savidge • Crackers in the Glade 27 Bryant, David • Georgia’s Amazing Coast 38 Burroughs, Franklin • Billy Watson’s Croker Sack 31 • The River Home 31 Campbell, Alan • Ossabaw 37 Camuto, Christopher • A Fly Fisherman’s Blue Ridge 30 • Another Country 30 • Hunting from Home 30 Cauthen, Sudye • Southern Comforts 26 Cerulean, Susan • Tracking Desire 27 Crowe, Thomas Rain • Zoro’s Field 31 Dallmeyer, Dorinda G., ed. • Elemental South 29 Daniel, John, ed. • Wild Song 29 Davidson, George • Georgia’s Amazing Coast 38 Dilbeck, Perry • The Last Harvest 37 Dixon, Terrell F., ed. • City Wilds 25 Friederici, Peter • The Suburban Wild 26 Goodall, Jane • Visions of Caliban 36 Harper, Francis • Okefinokee Album 39 Hurd, Barbara • Entering the Stone 24 • Stirring the Mud 24 • Walking the Wrack Line 24 Kaufman, David R. • Peachtree Creek 38 Kilgo, James • Colors of Africa 32 • Deep Enough for Ivorybills 32 • Inheritance of Horses 32 • Ossabaw 37 Kline, David • Scratching the Woodchuck 34 Lane, John • Chattooga 33 • Circling Home 33 • Waist Deep in Black Water 33 Lane, John, ed. • The Woods Stretched for Miles 29 index next Leigh, Jack • Ossabaw 37 Levin, Ted • Liquid Land 27 Logsdon, Gene • The Pond Lovers 35 Lopez, Barry • Lessons from the Wolverine 35 Maloof, Joan • Teaching the Trees 25 Mulcahy, Joanne B. • Birth and Rebirth on an Alaskan Island 35 Nourse, Carol • The State Botanical Garden of Georgia 38 • Wildflowers of Georgia 38 Nourse, Hugh • The State Botanical Garden of Georgia 38 • Wildflowers of Georgia 38 Noy, Rick Van • A Natural Sense of Wonder 25 Peterson, Dale • Chimpanzee Travels 36 • Visions of Caliban 36 Plum, Sydney Landon • Solitary Goose 31 Pohrt, Tom • Lessons from the Wolverine 35 Presley, Delma E. • Okefinokee Album 39 Rehmann, Elsa • American Plants for American Gardens 34 Roberts, Edith A. • American Plants for American Gardens 34 Russell, Sally • Shatter Me with Dawn 34 Sari, Riska Orpa • Riska 36 Schlegel, Stuart A. • Wisdom from a Rainforest 36 Seaman, Donna, ed. • In Our Nature 29 Shuler, Jay • Had I the Wings 39 Solnit, Rebecca • As Eve Said to the Serpent 39 Soos, Frank • Bamboo Fly Rod Suite 37 Spalding, Linda, ed. • Riska 36 Storter, Rob • Crackers in the Glade 27 Tallmadge, John • The Cincinnati Arch 26 Teal, John • Portrait of an Island 39 Teal, Mildred • Portrait of an Island 39 Thurmond, Gerald, ed. • The Woods Stretched for Miles 29 Underhill, Linda • The Unequal Hours 35 White, Sharon • Vanished Gardens 25 Whitehead, Fred • The Seasons of Cumberland Island 37 Williams, Philip Lee • Crossing Wildcat Ridge 34 nature writing & trade nonfiction barbara hurd Walking the Wrack Line On Tidal Shifts and What Remains Barbara Hurd Hurd gives nature writing a human dimension in this final volume of her trilogy that began with Stirring the Mud and Entering the Stone. With prose both eloquent and wise, her close attention to objects that wash ashore widens into larger concerns: the persistence of habits, desire, disappointments, the lie of the perfectly preserved, the pleasures of aversions, transformations, and a phenomenon from physics known as the strange attractor. new “Each sentence is an exploration. Every small thing opens into a universe seen through Hurd’s brave and curious lens. Her hunt for minutia is subtly inspired and above all tangible, worldly, real.”—Craig Childs, author of The Secret Knowledge of Water 136 pp. Cloth, $22.95t | 3102-7 Entering the Stone On Caves and Feeling through the Dark Barbara Hurd A Library Journal Best Natural History Book of the Year “Reading Entering the Stone is not unlike exploring a cave system. The layout may be unclear. Some quarters may be confined. But then, unexpectedly, a seemingly unconnected chamber will converge with other passages and you find yourself in an expansive space and feel you’ve encountered something enlightening.”—New York Times Book Review 184 pp. Paper, $16.95t | 3153-9 new in paper Stirring the Mud On Swamps, Bogs, and Human Imagination Barbara Hurd A Los Angeles Times Book of the Year “Delving into these wetlands, she finds in their array of strange fauna and flora an objective correlative to the place in the mind where artistic inspiration occurs: a place of blurred borders, shifting identity, and strange odors, of rot and death, of Zen peacefulness.” —The New Yorker 160 pp. Paper, $16.95t | 3152-2 new in paper page 24 w w w.ugapress.org 800-266-5842 index order form nature writing & trade nonfiction A Natural Sense of Wonder Connecting Kids with Nature through the Seasons Rick Van Noy “The question of how parents should appropriately connect their children with nature is accessibly and gently articulated here. This is a great book for a wide range of parents and is full of the realities of parenting in a postmodern age. Whereas Richard Louv’s Last Child in the Woods is issues oriented and broadly sociological, A Natural Sense of Wonder is hands on.” —David Sobel, author of Beyond Ecophobia 152 pp. Paper, $16.95t | 3103-4 new Teaching the Trees Lessons from the Forest Joan Maloof “Maloof combines science, heart, and spirit as a wonderful reminder of how important, special, and sacred trees are to us and to our world. Use this book as your call to action to conserve, protect, and restore our earth’s trees and forests.”—Julia Butterfly Hill “An impassioned take on the sacred nature of trees, with natural-history essays touching on their critical role in all our lives.”—Body + Soul 176 pp. | 19 b&w photos Paper, $16.95t | 2955-0 new in paper Vanished Gardens available September 2008 Finding Nature in Philadelphia Sharon White Winner of the Association of Writers and Writing Programs Award for Creative Nonfiction New to living and gardening in Philadelphia, Sharon White begins a journey through the landscape of the city, past and present, in Vanished Gardens. In prose sometimes as precise and considered as the paths in a parterre, sometimes as flowing and lyrical as an Olmsted vista, White explores the city as a part of its greater ecosystem and animates the lives of specific gardeners and naturalists working in the area around her new home. 240 pp. Cloth, $28.95t | 3156-0 City Wilds Essays and Stories about Urban Nature Edited by Terrell F. Dixon “This book is not only delightful and instructive; it’s urgently important.” —Robert Hass, former Poet Laureate of the United States “All the senses are alive in the best of these essays and stories. The writing proves the old theory that our finest metaphors come from nature, no matter where we find it.” —Los Angeles Times Book Review 336 pp. Paper, $19.95t | 2339-8 Cloth, $45.00s | 2350-3 page 25 w w w.ugapress.org 800-266-5842 index order form nature writing & trade nonfiction The Suburban Wild Peter Friederici “Celebrating the wildness that pervades the patches between roads, buildings and parking lots in urban America, The Suburban Wild addresses a question that gains increasing importance as more and more of the world converts to concrete jungle: How does wildness adapt to survive and thrive in a human-dominated world?”—E: The Environmental Magazine “Close to poetry in its lyrical compression and imagery.”—Chicago Tribune 136 pp. Cloth, $22.95t | 2134-9 The Cincinnati Arch Learning from Nature in the City John Tallmadge “I predict that The Cincinnati Arch will be looked at as a literary landmark because of its merger between nature writing and urban America. The fact that it is gorgeously written and elegantly conceived shouldn’t hurt, either.”—John Elder, Reading the Mountains of Home 240 pp. Paper, $16.95t | 2690-0 Unjacketed cloth, $49.95y | 2676-4 Everglades available February 2009 Outside and Within Marion Belanger With an essay by Susan Orlean Center Books on the American South After reading The Orchid Thief, Belanger headed to the Everglades to discover what the writer had so vividly captured in prose. Belanger went to find wilderness, but instead she found a puzzling dichotomy: visually, it is often hard to know whether one is outside or within this “natural” sanctuary. In her photographic sequence we see the pull between commerce and human enterprise and the need for boundless wilderness. 80 pp. | 39 duotone and 12 color photos Paper, $30.00t | 978-1-930066-85-6 Cloth, $50.00s | 978-1-930066-84-8 new Southern Comforts Rooted in a Florida Place Sudye Cauthen Center Books on the American South “Cauthen returned to her native Alachua County, land of live oaks and longleaf-pine churches, searching for something unnameable. Her book is a personal history told so beautifully, layer upon layer, that even James Agee would be undone. A longing like a wildfire runs through these pages, entwined in stories of farmers and preachers, churchgoers and criminals: Go back, go back. Folkloric and spiritual, this uncommon study is a monument to a place that was.”—Janisse Ray, author of Ecology of a Cracker Childhood 192 pp. | 24 b&w photos | 33 figures | 7 maps Cloth, $29.95t | 978-1-930066-58-8 new page 26 w w w.ugapress.org 800-266-5842 index order form nature writing & trade nonfiction Liquid Land A Journey through the Florida Everglades Ted Levin Winner of the 2004 John Burroughs Medal “The Florida Everglades seems to bring out the best and worst in humans; Liquid Land is a love letter to a historic swamp and a probing look at the people who are fighting over its future.”—Audubon “A must-read primer for all the players in the Everglades conservation effort.”—Orion 312 pp. | 16 photos | 3 maps Paper, $16.95t | 2672-6 Cloth, $29.95t | 2512-5 Tracking Desire A Journey after Swallow-tailed Kites Susan Cerulean “An honest book, finely written . . . Her narrative—from the obsessive pursuit of kites to a cry against human destruction of other forms of life—is a deeply personal journey. It is also the author’s attempt to ‘dive for spirit, the invisible river of being that connects us all at one time, all the time.’”—Audubon “Obsession has rarely had a lovelier or more compelling subject than this one. . . . at once a paean, a pilgrimage, and a penance.”—Orion 192 pp. Paper, $16.95t | 2819-5 Cloth, $24.95t | 2697-9 Crackers in the Glade Life and Times in the Old Everglades Rob Storter Edited by Betty Savidge Briggs “A finely realized portrait of a unique world and way of life that have all but vanished . . . [Storter was] a born observer, blessed with keen eye, gentle soul and uncanny memory. Vivid details make his chronicle compelling and often moving.”—Miami Herald new in paper page 27 160 pp. | 118 color photos | 1 map Paper, $22.95t | 3043-3 w w w.ugapress.org 800-266-5842 index order form nature writing & trade nonfiction BILL BELLEVILLE Deep Cuba The Inside Story of an American Oceanographic Expedition Bill Belleville An account of Belleville’s month-long journey around Cuba in the company of American and Cuban marine biologists and a Discovery Channel film crew. “Rank[s] with the best travel writing . . . Deep Cuba will appeal to a wide range of readers: armchair travelers, recreational divers, naturalists and anyone curious about Castro and the Caribbean’s largest island.”—Orlando Sentinel 296 pp. | 1 map Paper, $18.95t | 2620-7 Cloth, $27.95t | 2417-3 River of Lakes A Journey on Florida’s St. Johns River Bill Belleville Winner of 2000 Michael J. Shaara Outstanding Writer Award “Rich in history, both natural and human. This well-researched travelog is a must for every Floridian’s adventure library.”—St. Petersburg Times “In this well-written book [Belleville] establishes his kinship with William Bartram . . . and other artists who have felt the tug of its currents.”—Audubon 256 pp. | 1 map Paper, $18.95t | 2344-2 Sunken Cities, Sacred Cenotes, and Golden Sharks Travels of a Water-Bound Adventurer Bill Belleville Belleville takes us through Florida, the Caribbean, and Latin America in quest of the distinctive, the wondrous, the threatened, and the undiscovered. “Belleville is an expert diver whose wanderlust takes him to places few sane people would venture. . . . Yet such is Belleville’s talent that even when he ventures into relatively familiar territory, he brings an unfamiliar perspective, finding adventure and wonderment in little-seen corners of the natural world.”—Natural History 248 pp. | 19 photos | 1 map Cloth, $29.95t | 2592-7 page 28 w w w.ugapress.org 800-266-5842 index order form nature writing & trade nonfiction Elemental South An Anthology of Southern Nature Writing Edited by Dorinda G. Dallmeyer Winner of the Phillip D. Reed Memorial Award for Outstanding Writing on the Southern Environment A gathering of works by some of the region’s best nature writers—people who can coax from words the mysteries of our place in the landscape and the human relationship to wildness. The writers are all participants in the Southern Nature Project, an ongoing endeavor founded on the conviction that writing like the kind gathered here can help us to lead more human, profound, and courageous lives in terms of how we use our earth. 176 pp. Paper, $16.95t | 2689-4 Unjacketed cloth, 39.95y | 2665-8 In Our Nature Stories of Wildness Edited by Donna Seaman Fourteen stellar short stories by writers such as Barry Lopez, Rick Bass, Margaret Atwood, E. L. Doctorow, Chris Offutt, and others plumb the mystery—as only fiction can—of nature within us and the world of nature that surrounds us. “Each of these strikingly original narratives expands the horizon of conventional nature writing.”—Audubon 272 pp. Paper, $19.95t | 2457-9 Wild Song Poems of the Natural World Edited by John Daniel Eighty-three poems on the eternal and timely themes of nature, written by both eminent poets and emerging talents. “One of the finest recent collections of poetry of place . . . should find a lasting place on any poetry lover’s shelf.”—Oregon Life 144 pp. | 7 illustrations Paper, $18.95s | 2011-3 The Woods Stretched for Miles New Nature Writing from the South Edited by John Lane and Gerald Thurmond Essays about southern landscape and nature from nineteen writers with geographic or ancestral ties to the region. This remarkable group encompasses not only such well-known names as Wendell Berry and Rick Bass but also distinctive new voices, including Christopher Camuto, Susan Cerulean, and Eddy L. Harris. 256 pp. Paper, $16.95t | 2088-5 Unjacketed cloth, $40.00s | 2087-8 page 29 w w w.ugapress.org 800-266-5842 index order form nature writing & trade nonfiction christopher camuto Another Country Journeying toward the Cherokee Mountains Christopher Camuto “Not since Barry Lopez welded landscape and imagination together in Arctic Dreams has a writer so ambitiously attempted to elevate local culture and landscape to universal understanding and insight.”—Orion “Camuto’s highly engaging personal reflection on the reintroduction of the red wolf to Great Smoky Mountains National Park creeps up on you like Canis rufus itself, with stealth and cunning. Another Country is a deep regret over missed opportunities and a small measure of satisfaction in this effort at redress.”—New York Times Book Review 368 pp. Paper, $18.95t | 2237-7 A Fly Fisherman’s Blue Ridge Christopher Camuto “The best book about fly-fishing to come along in some years.”—Fly Rod & Reel “A series of deeply moving essays on an American region by an angler with an eye for detail and a poet’s way with the language. Camuto’s book reminds one of Annie Dillard, Edward Abbey, even Thoreau.”—Virginia Quarterly Review 238 pp. | 1 map Paper, $16.95t | 2304-6 Hunting from Home A Year Afield in the Blue Ridge Mountains Christopher Camuto “Camuto is, pound for pound, word for word, the heavyweight champion of southern nature writing.”—Bloomsbury Review “The stealthy cadence of Camuto’s prose reveals glimpses of his effort to do justice to a place and way of life that often seem just beyond his reach; hunting becomes a metaphor of how to capture the natural within the self and on the page.”—New York Times Book Review 320 pp. Paper, $18.95t | 2683-2 page 30 w w w.ugapress.org 800-266-5842 index order form nature writing & trade nonfiction Billy Watson’s Croker Sack Franklin Burroughs “An exquisitely wrought and unerringly graceful book.”—Jim Harrison “[His] essays evoke William Faulkner’s South and E. B. White’s farm. But Burroughs’s style is distinctly his own: always elegant, sometimes simple, plainly honest, and, perhaps most of all, completely authentic.”—Fourth Genre 160 pp. | 1 b&w illus. Paper, $15.95t | 1999-5 The River Home A Return to the Carolina Low Country Franklin Burroughs Burroughs chronicles a canoe voyage through the Carolinas, visiting his ancestral homeland and the people who inhabit the banks of the Waccamaw River. “The hot-damnedest literary canoe trip since John Graves’s Goodbye to a River.” —John G. Mitchell 224 pp. | 16 b&w illus. | 1 map Paper, $15.95t | 1998-8 Zoro’s Field My Life in the Appalachian Woods Thomas Rain Crowe Foreword by Christopher Camuto Winner of the Ragan Old North State Award and the Phillip D. Reed Memorial Award for Outstanding Writing on the Southern Environment “I have known Thomas Crowe for thirty years or so, as poet, writer, editor, and community activist. Before he returned to North Carolina he was a neighbor in my part of California. I have always respected his work and dedication as someone who has truly found both his place and his work, and recommend him highly. His writing speaks from a fluency with landscape and an ease with language like water. At home in both.” —Gary Snyder, author of The Practice of the Wild 240 pp. Paper, $16.95t | 2862-1 Solitary Goose Sydney Landon Plum “A provocative, revelatory meditation on life, both human and wild. While telling the story of caring for a solitary, wounded goose who inhabits a pond near her home, Plum contemplates not only the resilience and fragility of migratory birds, but also our human place in the world—its separateness from the wild, and all the decisions, inconsistencies, longings, and intentions that separateness entails.”—Jane Brox, author of Clearing Land 152 pp. Cloth, $24.95t | 2966-6 new page 31 w w w.ugapress.org 800-266-5842 index order form nature writing & trade nonfiction James Kilgo Colors of Africa James Kilgo “I can think of few authors so well qualified to write a book like this. James Kilgo, naturalist, spiritual thinker, hunter, historian, and, above all, author extraordinaire, has written something ‘about’ an African safari—but only in the way, say, that Melville wrote ‘about’ whaling. A splendid accomplishment.”—Sydney Lea, author of Hunting the Whole Way Home 224 pp. Paper, $16.95t | 3017-4 Cloth, $24.95t | 2500-2 Brown Thrasher Books Deep Enough for Ivorybills James Kilgo “Kilgo’s powerful memoir does justice to the finest literature in the southern tradition.” —New York Times Book Review “Throughout this small, taut book, Kilgo’s feeling for the bottomland comes through in quiet, honest, and convincing language.”—Outside Magazine 208 pp. | 17 illus. Paper, $16.95t | 1760-1 Inheritance of Horses James Kilgo “These essays are made of the real stuff of life, movingly portrayed, deeply touched with humor and dignity and sadness and, above all, the joy of life. There is great eloquence here.” —Larry Brown “A remarkable book. The prose has a deep and abiding grace married to a strikingly original candor, more classic than confessional, more mainstream than au courant.”—Jim Harrison 160 pp. Paper, $14.95t | 1796-0 Cloth, $24.95t | 1640-6 page 32 w w w.ugapress.org 800-266-5842 index order form nature writing & trade nonfiction John Lane Chattooga Descending into the Myth of Deliverance River John Lane “A native Southerner, Lane loves the leisurely, unfolding front-porch tale. . . . Yet he has written a very modern book, one that argues that to look at a landscape or an animal in just one or two ways is to diminish it. . . . [A]n insightful and companionable examination of a book, a movie, and a river that still runs free.”—Orion 224 pp. | 1 map Paper, $18.95t | 2775-4 Cloth, $29.95t | 2611-5 Circling Home John Lane A Wormsloe Foundation Nature Book “Two verbs: to roam, to home. Nature writers, going back at least to the great T’ang Dynasty poets, have wrestled with these two urges. Lane spent the first half of his life roaming and writing about life on the move. Now comes Circling Home, his big-hearted account of settling down with a family and homing in on the richly textured landscape that surrounds his new hearth. Like Wendell Berry and Wes Jackson before him, John Lane superbly demonstrates the virtues and the obstacles of becoming native to one place.” —Erik Reece, author of Lost Mountain 224 pp. | 1 map Cloth, $24.95t | 3040-2 new Waist Deep in Black Water John Lane “His narratives are always excursions, which may be into the exotic outback of Suriname, up a local mountain road, or down a suburban creek. They produce knowledge that is never final, momentary illumination of what cannot be systematically elucidated.” —Franklin Burroughs, author of The River Home 200 pp. Paper, $18.95t | 2621-4 Cloth, $29.95t | 2461-6 page 33 w w w.ugapress.org 800-266-5842 index order form nature writing & trade nonfiction Shatter Me with Dawn A Celebration of Country Life Sally Russell Illustrations by Katie Ridley Russell celebrates day-to-day rural living, the seasons and cycles of nature, the love of land and family, and her own heart-driven ambition to make her home a place of harmony and refuge. “A luminous and loving portrait with a rare beauty and subtlety that describes a way of life already lost to most Americans.”—Philip Lee Williams 256 pp. Cloth, $24.95t | 2298-8 Crossing Wildcat Ridge A Memoir of Nature and Healing Philip Lee Williams “A unique and beautiful work lying somewhere in the interstices between poetry and prose, between the scientist’s analysis and the mystic’s meditation. Within its fabric, two intertwine. . . . Williams strips reality to the bone and with the precision of a Zen master’s sword slices through to the immediacy of raw experience. . . . His passion then invites the reader to slow down, see, hear, feel, and finally be, and in so being, be fulfilled.”—Bloomsbury Review 240 pp. Cloth, $24.95t | 2090-8 Scratching the Woodchuck Nature on an Amish Farm David Kline “Kline writes with joy, good humor, and style—I can’t think of a book that’s given me more pleasure in years.”—Bill McKibben “Kline’s vision goes beyond 20/20 into the realm of A/Z, where he eloquently uses all of the letters in between to delight us with his insights from his wide travels at home. He’s an Amish Thoreau, except he scratches the woodchuck that Thoreau ate.”—Wes Jackson 232 pp. | 5 drawings Paper, $16.95t | 2154-7 American Plants for American Gardens Edith A. Roberts and Elsa Rehmann Foreword by Darrel G. Morrison American Plants was one of the first popular books to promote the use of plant ecology and native plants in gardening and landscaping and demonstrates the basic, practical application of ecological principles to the selection of plant groups that are inherently suited to a particular climate, soil, topography, and lighting. “Still one of the best books I have seen in respect to holistic natural design in the residential landscape.”—Journal of the New England Garden History Society 176 pp. Cloth, $34.95s | 1851-6 page 34 w w w.ugapress.org 800-266-5842 index order form nature writing & trade nonfiction The Unequal Hours Moments of Being in the Natural World Linda Underhill “Illustrates the author’s close attention to nature as she describes the exquisite images and character of her hometown in rural western New York State, a community threatened by a toxic waste dump.”—Library Journal 160 pp. Cloth, $24.95t | 2040-3 The Pond Lovers Gene Logsdon “In this charming collection, Logsdon explores the beauty and depths of the farm pond, how it can become the center of the universe for the social fabric of a family, providing recreation and a spot for reflection, and how it can become the center of the universe for sustainable agriculture, providing food, solar energy, and waste treatment.” —Mary Swander, author of Out of This World 176 pp. Paper, $16.95t | 2954-3 Lessons from the Wolverine Barry Lopez Illustrated by Tom Pohrt In this story of a spiritual adventure from the author and illustrator of Crow and Weasel, a young man journeys through the arctic wilderness to find a family of wolverine and learn more about their mysterious power. Lopez’s story, infused with gentle magic, shows how one man comes to experience the wondrous power of animals and to understand his place in the natural world in a new way. “Please tell that collaborative pair not to separate. They have a lifework to do together.” —Wallace Stegner 32 pp. | 13 color figures Cloth, $15.95t | 1927-8 Birth and Rebirth on an Alaskan Island The Life of an Alutiiq Healer Joanne B. Mulcahy Foreword by Gordon L. Pullar “A significant contribution to Alaskan anthropology and to the ethnographic literature about Alutiiq people. Mulcahy’s writing is exceptional, and her scholarship meets the highest standards for ethnographic studies. Truly outstanding, she stands on the firm foundation established by Margaret Mead, Elizabeth Marshall Thomas, and Colin Turnbull.” —Richard Nelson, author of Make Prayers to the Raven 208 pp. | 15 b&w photos | 1 map Cloth, $24.95t | 2253-7 page 35 w w w.ugapress.org 800-266-5842 index order form nature writing & trade nonfiction Riska Memories of a Dayak Girlhood Riska Orpa Sari Edited by Linda Spalding 1999 Finalist, Kiriyama Pacific Rim Book Prize “A lovely memoir . . . a rare and valuable record [and] a thoroughly original account of growing up in the rain forests of Borneo . . . Fresh, direct writing and sparkling, meandering connections between thoughts, snatches of conversation and memory.”—Globe and Mail 302 pp. Paper, $16.95t | 2270-4 Chimpanzee Travels On and Off the Road in Africa Dale Peterson “A lighthearted, deliciously amusing, but accurate story of Peterson’s travels into the forests and byways of Africa in search of chimpanzees and the strange white apes who study them.” —Jane Goodall “Delightful . . . A book in which humor arm-wrestles with the pathos of paradise lost in modern Africa.”—Philadelphia Inquirer 288 pp. | 1 map Paper, $18.95t | 2489-0 Visions of Caliban On Chimpanzees and People Dale Peterson and Jane Goodall “Beautifully written, easily read, and ethically challenging—it just might become primatology’s Silent Spring.”—Nature “A study of the relationship between humans and chimps [that] asks, which is ‘most brutish’?”—New York Times Book Review 392 pp. | 22 b&w photos | 1 map Paper, $18.95t | 2206-3 Wisdom from a Rainforest The Spiritual Journey of an Anthropologist Stuart A. Schlegel 1999 Finalist, Philippine National Book Award, Social Science In the early sixties, anthropologist Stuart A. Schlegel went into a remote rainforest on the Philippine island of Mindanao. What he found was a group of people whose tolerant, gentle way of life would transform his own values and beliefs profoundly. “Very readable . . . A compelling portrait of a way of life very different from our own.” —Washington Post Book World 288 pp. | 2 figures | 1 map Paper, $19.95s | 2491-3 page 36 w w w.ugapress.org 800-266-5842 index order form nature writing & trade nonfiction Bamboo Fly Rod Suite Reflections on Fishing and the Geography of Grace Frank Soos Illustrations by Kesler Woodward Soos’s painstaking restoration of an old bamboo fly rod becomes the central metaphor and the unifying theme for the captivating personal essays presented here. “A vivid account . . . Lays open in the hand as neatly as an elegant English fly box and would handily fit in the outside pocket of a fishing vest.”—Chelsea 80 pp. | 31 photos Paper, $14.95t | 2835-5 The Seasons of Cumberland Island Fred Whitehead “[A] lovely book . . . The photographs are simply stunning, and brilliantly capture the drama and beauty of this remarkable landscape. There may be a more wonderful place in the National Park System than Cumberland, but I have yet to find it.”—Bloomsbury Review 112 pp. | 118 photos | 1 map Cloth, $39.95t | 2497-5 A Wormsloe Foundation Nature Book Ossabaw Evocations of an Island Jack Leigh, James Kilgo, and Alan Campbell Winner of 2004 Georgia Author of the Year, Specialty Books “Kilgo, Leigh, and Campbell present island lovers with a place that grips the imagination and stirs the soul.”—Islands 112 pp. | 20 photos | 20 paintings Cloth, $29.95t | 2642-9 The Last Harvest Truck Farmers in the Deep South Perry Dilbeck Center Books on the American South “Dilbeck’s plastic camera images are reverential even in their darkest corners, his entire body of work—pictures and words—a liturgical offering to the cultural and visual richness of these men and their care of land and community. His photographs document these farmers and their agricultural spaces, but they do much more than simply record. They are at once an honest reflection of well-lived lives and transformative expressions of Dilbeck’s respectful and creative vision.”—Tom Rankin, from the conclusion 112 pp. | 62 duotone photos Cloth, $32.50t | 978-1-930066-49-6 page 37 w w w.ugapress.org 800-266-5842 index order form nature writing & trade nonfiction Peachtree Creek A Natural and Unnatural History of Atlanta’s Watershed David R. Kaufman Winner of the Phillip D. Reed Memorial Award for Outstanding Writing on the Southern Environment “Kaufman’s original perspective, as a traveler along the urban creek that is now hidden to most Atlantans, helps connect the past to the present through facts, stories, and legends about this natural lifeline.” —Sally Bethea, Executive Director of the Upper Chattahoochee Riverkeeper 232 pp. | 73 color, 97 b&w photos | 8 maps Cloth, $34.95t | 2929-1 Published in association with the Atlanta History Center new The State Botanical Garden of Georgia Carol Nourse and Hugh Nourse These 145 spectacular color photographs celebrate nature’s cycles in a splendid and diverse southern garden. Each month for more than six years, Carol and Hugh Nourse have explored the paths and collections of the State Botanical Garden of Georgia in Athens, capturing the kaleidoscope of its seasons. 144 pp. | 145 color photos Cloth, $34.95t | 2327-5 Wildflowers of Georgia Hugh Nourse and Carol Nourse The 86 vividly detailed photographs presented in this large-format volume capture the diversity and splendor of these sometimes elusive plants, many of which are endangered by human activities. “A book for everyone from the expert botanist to those unfamiliar with our state’s native plants. Through its publication, the authors will inspire in all of us a love for our native flora and a desire to protect and preserve it.” —Greater Atlanta Gardener 120 pp. | 85 color photos Cloth, $29.95t | 2179-0 Georgia’s Amazing Coast Natural Wonders from Alligators to Zoeas David Bryant and George Davidson Illustrated by Charlotte Ingram Winner of 2004 Georgia Author of the Year, Children’s and Young Adult Literature An inviting collection of one hundred short, self-contained features about the flora, fauna, and natural history of that fascinating place where land meets sea. “[A] fun book about our fascinating coastal wildlife.”—Southern Living 112 pp. | 100 full-color illustrations Paper, $14.95t | 2533-0 page 38 w w w.ugapress.org 800-266-5842 index order form nature writing & trade nonfiction Portrait of an Island Mildred Teal and John Teal When the Teals moved to Sapelo Island, Georgia, in 1955, they stepped back in time to a virtually undeveloped landscape of salt marsh, maritime forest, freshwater ponds, sand dunes, and beaches. Over the course of a four-year stay their careful observations of the island’s unique marine ecology and wonderfully varied flora and fauna became the basis for Portrait of an Island. “This engagingly unpretentious account of the island and what the authors found there is informative—and happily evokes the idyllic atmosphere of the place.”—Audubon 184 pp. | 32 illus. figures | 1 map Paper, $14.95t | 1961-2 Had I the Wings The Friendship of Bachman and Audubon Jay Shuler Shuler offers the first in-depth portrayal of the John Bachman–John James Audubon relationship and its significance in the creation of Audubon’s works, rescues from obscurity Bachman’s contributions to American ornithology and mammalogy, and illuminates the fascinating relationship between two major nineteenth-century naturalists. “A valuable addition to the naturalist’s library.”—Journal of Southern History 252 pp. | 8 b&w photos Paper, $18.00t | 2079-3 Okefinokee Album Francis Harper and Delma E. Presley Based on the photographs and writings of Francis Harper, a naturalist who visited the Okefinokee Swamp repeatedly between 1912 and 1951, this book is filled with profiles of the swamp dwellers, their wisdom, superstitions, songs, stories, and folkways, as well as a wealth of information about the natural history of the swamp. “Marvelous, candid photos out of time itself.”—Southern Living 212 pp. | 68 photos Paper, $19.95t | 1274-3 As Eve Said to the Serpent On Landscape, Gender, and Art Rebecca Solnit 2002 Finalist, National Book Critics Circle Award “Reading Solnit’s various and vigorous essays is like hiking with an energetic and experienced guide: One discovers the richness of place, and gains perspective.”—Bloomsbury Review “Solnit . . . is the very model of a public intellectual.”—San Francisco Chronicle 234 pp. | 60 photos Paper, $22.95t | 2493-7 page 39 w w w.ugapress.org 800-266-5842 index order form ordering Please send me the following books: Qty. 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