Friday, December 14, 2012

Let the Mountains Talk, Let the Rivers Run by David Brower


As a climber, David Brower scaled many previously "insurmountable" mountains. As a conservationist, Brower has bought a mountaineer's determination and reverence for nature to his efforts to protect the earth and educate its human’s inhabitants. He has kept dams out of Grand Canyon and loggers out of Olympic National Park, established the National Wilderness Preservation System, added seven new regions to the National Park System, and helped to foster a mind-set that questions careless growth. 
In Let the Mountains Talk, Let the Rivers Run, the "archdruid" of modern environmentalism, the man The New York Times designated the most effective conservation activist in the world, offers a tough, witty, and impassioned game plan "for those who would save the earth." Now eighty-two years old, Brower also recounts the highs and lows of his controversial career, sparing no politician or public figure, least of all himself. He frankly discusses his mistakes, such as compromising on the construction of Glen Canyon Dam, and the strategic flourishes that have earned him both fans and foes, including  the full-page, in-your-face national newspaper ads that helped save the Grand Canyon by asking "Should we also flood the Sistine Chapel so that tourists can get a better look at the ceiling?"

2 comments:

  1. Alden,

    Are you still reading this book? It sounds great!

    Thanks,
    Missy

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  2. I am reading it for my environmental science call and its really good. I think that I like it so much because I can relate to Daivd Brower the expressions that he uses. He cares about the environment just like I do. He cares so much about the environment to go undercover and exploit a fishery that killed dolphins.

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