
THE DIRE ELEGIES: 59 Poets on Endangered Species of North America
by Edward O. Wilson, David Dodd, W.S. Merwin, Bill McKibben, Gary Snyder, Enid Shomer, William Heyen, Campbell McGrath, Todd Davis, Brian Swann, Lewis Turco, John Hutchinson, John E. Smelcer, Alisa Gordaneer, Gerald Schwartz, Lynn Pattison, Elise Paschen, Gary Lawless, Kathleen March, Steven Huff, Michele F. Cooper, Margo Stever, Susan Edwards Richmond, Patricia Ellyn Powell, Karla Linn Merrifield, Dennis Fritzinger, Patricia Roth Schwartz, Catie Jarvis, Ann Beman, Donna M. Marbach, Wanda Schubmehl, Richard Downing, Katherine L. Gordon, Chris Green, Wilda Morris, Linda Opyr, Constance Vogel, Marilyn Peretti, Casey Carroll, Mary Laufer, Beau Cutts, Shirley S. Stevens, Joe St. Martin, Jen Eddy, Bruce Sweet, Erica Caldwell, James A. Parsley, Yanlaey Kae, Jon Palzer, Jessica Langen-Peck, Jay Franzel, Kathleen Van Schaick, Marian Lovene Griffey, Ellen Malone, Michele Bar-David, Anne W. Hammond, Marianna Tupper, Jason A. Seivers, Lisa Scott Hilton, Elizabeth Lawson
- Tytuł oryginalny
- Atomic Habits
- Język oryginału
- Angielski
- Liczba stron
- 320
- Wydawnictwo
- Avery
O tej książce
Dr. Edward O. Wilson, world-renowned Harvard entomologist and two-time Pulitzer-Prize winning author, points out in the epigraph to this unique collection of poetry, ...the better an ecosystem is known, the less likely it will be destroyed. This is the premise of THE DIRE ELEGIES: 59 Poets on Endangered Species of North America and why author Bill McKibben says in the book's foreword, These magnificent poems work as a chant to summon more of the love to save the endangered from extinction. It's also why writer Susan Cerulean has called the book an important manifesto: a must-read for our times. A helpful feature of the anthology is the species notes that accompany the poems each time a new species is introduced. For example, when readers encounter Minnesota poet Shirley S. Stevens's poem On Spotting a Pygmy Owl, they also learn: The endangered cactus ferruginous pygmy owl, Glaucidium brasilianum cactorum, of the U.S. Southwest and Mexico, numbered only 12 birds when it was listed in the U.S. in 1997. A USF&WS recovery team began its work to rescue the species in 1998, but its fate remains precarious. ContentsForeword: Regarding the Frog and Our Real Selves, Bill McKibbenPreface: A Righteous Case for the 1,277, Karla Linn Merrifield, Roger M. WeirEpigraph, E. O. WilsonIn the BeginningRoll Call, North American, Chris NormentA Bestiary of Continuous Extinctions, Steven HuffI.Grizzly, Michele F. CooperYou Are in Bear Country, Maxine KuminIn Concert, Jen EddyLoss, Dennis FritzingerKilled by the Bear, John HutchinsonTreat Each Bear, Gary Lawlessand much, much more!
Więcej od Edward O. Wilson
Classical METHODS V. 2
David Dodd, Derek Cooper, Norman B. Chapman, John Mendham
Die Geheimnisse der Wertpapieranalyse: Überlegenes Wissen für Ihre Anlageentscheidung
Benjamin Graham, David Dodd
Geraldine Brooks Biography: The Story of Memorial Days
David Dodd
Hurricane Havoc: Illustrated Children's Book Teaching Kids How To Cope With Natural Disasters Such As Hurricanes and Cyclones (Disaster Survival Series ...
David Dodd, Tanya Ellen, Margaux Dee