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Ask an Environmentalist Anne Woiwode, director of Michigan's Mackinaw Chapter of the Sierra Club, picks top five environmental books. Spring 2008 |
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1. The Lorax, by Dr. Seuss (1971): AW: “We sometimes think that the kinds of concerns we have to have about the environment have to be complex, but Dr. Seuss explains it in a clear and concise way.” 2. A Sand County Almanac, by Aldo Leopold (1949): AW: “It is a simple book, written in small pieces, but it gives you a sense of detail about wild places and things.” 3. The Hidden Forest: The Biography of an Ecosystem, by Jon R. Luoma (2006): AW: “What I particularly like about it is … we often see end products of scientific work, without seeing the missteps. Science is about trial and error. He shows where they got it wrong.” 4. The Diversity of Life, by Edward O. Wilson (1992): AW: Wilson is considered a “premiere scientist in the world on ecosystems and ecology.” Woiwode especially liked the book because he “describes things beautifully.” 5. The Omnivore’s Dilemma, by Michael Pollan (2006): AW: “People often feel disconnected from their own impacts. [They think] it’s done by factories and big companies. I’ve yet to read this, but it’s on my table at home.” Kerri Jo Molitor is a freshman studying journalism at MSU. This is her first appearance in EJ. Contact her at molitork@msu.edu |
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