A River Running West: The Life of John Wesley Powell

10 best books like A River Running West: The Life of John Wesley Powell (Donald Worster): The Eternal Frontier: An Ecological History of North America and Its Peoples, I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell, Sunk Without a Sound: The Tragic Colorado River Honeymoon of Glen and Bessie Hyde, The American West as Living Space, Changes in the Land: Indians, Colonists, and the Ecology of New England, The Machine in the Garden: Technology and the Pastoral Ideal in America, The Land of Little Rain, Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature, The Ecological Indian: Myth and History, Mosquito Empires: Ecology and War in the Greater Caribbean, 1620-1914

AuthorTim Flannery
ISBN0802138888
In The Eternal Frontier, world-renowned scientist and historian Tim Flannery tells the unforgettable story of the geological and biological evolution of the North American continent, from the time of the asteroid strike that ended the age of dinosaurs 65 million years ago, to the present day. Flannery...
I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell
AuthorTucker Max
ISBN0806527285
The Book That Inspired The Movie My name is Tucker Max, and I am an asshole. I get excessively drunk at inappropriate times, disregard social norms, indulge every whim, ignore the consequences of my actions, mock idiots and posers, sleep with more women than is safe or reasonable, and just generally...
Sunk Without a Sound: The Tragic Colorado River Honeymoon of Glen and Bessie Hyde
AuthorBrad Dimock
ISBN1892327988
On November 18, 1928, Glen and Bessie Hyde launched on the final leg of their honeymoon voyage through Grand Canyon. Their cumbersome wooden sweep scow was found upright and fully loaded three weeks later, but despite exhaustive searches, Glen and Bessie had vanished without a trace. Or had they? In...
AuthorWallace Stegner
ISBN0472063758
"Instead of adapting, as we began to do, we have tried to make country and climate over to fit our existing habits and desires. Instead of listening to the silence, we have shouted into the void. We have tried to make the arid West into what it was never meant to be and cannot remain, the Garden of the World...
AuthorWilliam Cronon
ISBN0809016346
The book that launched environmental history now updated.

Winner of the Francis Parkman Prize

In this landmark work of environmental history, William Cronon offers an original and profound explanation of the effects European colonists' sense of property and their pursuit of...
AuthorLeo Marx
For over four decades, Leo Marx's work has focused on the relationship between technology and culture in 19th- and 20th-century America. His research helped to define--and continues to give depth to--the area of American studies concerned with the links between scientific and technological advances,...
AuthorMary Hunter Austin
ISBN0140249192
“Between the high Sierras south from Yosemite—east and south over a very great assemblage of broken ranges beyond Death Valley, and on illimitably into the Mojave Desert” is the territory that Mary Austin calls the Land of Little Rain. In this classic collection of meditations on the wonders...
AuthorWilliam Cronon
ISBN0393315118
In a lead essay that powerfully states the broad argument of the book, William Cronon writes that the environmentalist goal of wilderness preservation is conceptually and politically wrongheaded. Among the ironies and entanglements resulting from this goal are the sale of nature in our malls through...
AuthorShepard Krech III
ISBN0393321002
The idea of the Native American living in perfect harmony with nature is one of the most cherished contemporary myths. But how truthful is this larger-than-life image? According to anthropologist Shepard Krech, the first humans in North America demonstrated all of the intelligence, self-interest,...
AuthorJohn Robert McNeill
ISBN0521452864
This book explores the links among ecology, disease, and international politics in the context of the Greater Caribbean - the landscapes lying between Surinam and the Chesapeake - in the seventeenth through early twentieth centuries. Ecological changes made these landscapes especially suitable...
AuthorAlfred W. Crosby
ISBN0521546184
People of European descent form the bulk of the population in most of the temperate zones of the world--North America, Australia and New Zealand. The military successes of European imperialism are easy to explain because in many cases they were achieved by using firearms against spears. Alfred Crosby,...
AuthorPatricia Nelson Limerick
ISBN0393304973
The 'settling' of the American West has been perceived throughout the world as a series of quaint, violent, and romantic adventures–most with happy endings–and a process that came to an end with the 'closing' of the frontier in the 1890s.

But in fact, Patricia Nelson Limerick argues,...
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