Please click above

to give us a rating

Related Books
Last One!
Rare!
Taking the Arrow Out of the Heart written by Alice Walker performed by Alice Walker on Audio CD (Unabridged)

Taking the Arrow Out of the Heart written by Alice Walker performed by Alice Walker on Audio CD (Unabridged)£29.99

Alice Walker, author of the National Book Award and Pulitzer Prize-winning The Color Purple-"an American novel of permanent importance" (San Francisco Chronicle)-crafts a bilingual collection that is both playfully imaginative and intensely moving. Presented in both English and Spanish, Alice Walker shares...

Wild at Heart - America's Turbulent Relationship with Nature written by Alice Outwater performed by Joyce Bean and on Audio CD (Unabridged)

Rare
Wild at Heart - America's Turbulent Relationship with Nature written by Alice Outwater performed by Joyce Bean and  on Audio CD (Unabridged)
  Zoom
Our Price:  £24.99Earn 24 Loyalty Points
+

ISBN:  9781721342495
Genre - Main:  Non-Fiction
Genre - Specific:  Nature
Duration:  573 mins
Length:  Unabridged
Author:  Alice Outwater
Performer 1:  Joyce Bean
Rarity:  Rare

Availability:  

  


We are currently running a special offer leading to FREE UK postage on all orders of £40 or more


"Through a narrative that roams in unexpected directions through surprising details and history, then periodically grounds itself by looping back to her own family before it soars off again, Alice Outwater’s infectiously readable Wild at Heart captures the essence of ecology: Everything is connected, and every...

connection leads to ourselves." --Alan Weisman, author, The World Without Us and Countdown In the tradition of The World Without Us, a beautifully written and ultimately hopeful history of our relationship with the natural world Nature on the brink? Maybe not. With so much bad news in the world, we forget how much environmental progress has been made.

In a narrative that reaches from Native American tribal practices to public health and commercial hunting, Wild at Heart shows how western attitudes towards nature have changed dramatically in the last five hundred years.

The Chinook gave thanks for King Salmon's gifts. The Puritans saw Nature as a frightening wilderness, full of "uncooked meat." With the industrial revolution, nature was despoiled and simultaneously celebrated as a source of the sublime.

With little forethought and great greed, Americans killed the last passenger pigeon, wiped out the old growth forests, and dumped so much oil in the rivers that they burst into flame. But in the span of a few decades, our relationship with nature has evolved to a more sophisticated sense of interdependence that brings us full circle.

Across the US, people are taking individual action, planting native species and fighting for projects like dam removal and wolf restoration. Cities are embracing nature, too.

Humans can learn from the past, and our choices today will determine whether nature survives. Like the First Nations, all nations must come to deep agreement that nature needs protection. This compelling book reveals both how we got here and our own and nature's astonishing ability to mutually regenerate.

Be the first to Write a Review for this item!