<p>"<i>Wilderness Forever</i> leads environmental history out of Carson's long shadow. It directs our attention well back past Earth Day..This thorough, lucid book fully realizes biography's promise to illuminate the past by describing a single life."</p>
Agricultural History
<p>"An exceptional biography of a remarkable subject.. <i>Wilderness Forever</i> deserves high praise..[and] will undoubtedly remain the definitive work on Zahniser. Harvey's meticulous research and engaging writing make this volume not only important, but a delight to read. With <i>Wilderness Forever</i>..Harvey firmly establishes himself as the leading historian of wilderness in the post-World War II era."</p>
New Mexico Historical Review
<p>"We have Mark Harvey to thank for a meticulously researched biography, riveting in its detail of how political alliances dissolved or reformed, of how bills became laws, and of how early wilderness defenders sought to reconcile wilderness management and undisturbed conditions."</p>
Western Historical Quarterly
<p>"A solid addition to the body of literature on conservationists and the development of wilderness areas. Highly recommended for the lay reader as well as the scholar."</p>
Electronic Green Journal
<p>"Do environmental historians really need yet another biography of a heroic environmentalist? . . . In the case of Mark Harvey's graceful study of Howard Zahniser, the answer to that question would seem to be, surprisingly, yes, the pantheon of environmental heroes needs to make room for one more addition. Those seeking to understand the tectonic shifts in environmental politics in the mid-twentieth century and the quiet man who played an unexpectedly large role in many of them will find <i>Wilderness Forever</i> to be a welcome— and long overdue— work of environmental biography."</p>
The Journal of American History
<p>"Mark Harvey's <i>Wilderness Forever</i> is a superb biography of the nation's preeminent postwar wilderness lobbyist. Harvey has given readers a detailed portrait of an activist who most environmental historians know was important but do not know well. Like the man it chronicles, <i>Wilderness Forever</i> is quiet and humble but also forceful and convincing."</p>
Oregon Historical Quarterly
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Mark Harvey is professor of history at North Dakota State University in Fargo. He is the author of A Symbol of Wilderness: Echo Park and the American Conservation Movement.