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books & more Great Plains: America's Lingering Wild
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Great Plains: America's Lingering Wild

$45.00
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Two hundred years ago, before the gun, the plow, the pump, and the fence created one of the most altered environments on Earth, the world’s greatest natural grasslands teemed with life. But in the blink of an eye, modernization forever altered the American prairie. Scores of species vanished or were marginalized, and in the span of a century small towns bloomed, then withered, as economic and climatic forces shifted. Today, the great expanse of the Great Plains — measuring some 500 to 700 miles wide and 1,800 miles long — is a blank slate in the American consciousness. The big empty, fly-over country, the outback.

The immense distances, infinite horizons, enveloping skies, and harsh climate of the Plains have always conveyed to newcomers a sense of strangeness and unpredictability. Some 18,000 years ago, when humans first ventured onto the Plains, they chose not to stay, but thousands of years later European-American settlers saw the potential of the endless grasslands. Great Plains: America’s Lingering Wild recaptures that beckoning landscape where pioneers once saw hope. As this book attests, promise survives on the Great Plains.

Photographer Michael Forsberg documents the Plains’ sprawling tableau, its diversity and grandeur, with his powerful images. He finds the gritty prairie survivors and shows the potential for species renewal, given the wisdom and will to conserve the remaining natural ecosystems. U.S. Poet Laureate Ted Kooser, preeminent geographer David Wishart, and writer-rancher Dan O’Brien add their own elegant, thoughtful voices to describe the magnificent beauties — and quandaries — of the Great Plains. The volume’s iconic cover of a bison beneath an immense and shifting prairie sky captures this book’s essence. Change and adaptability are constant and essential to all life on the prairie, but the human hand now lays more heavily than ever on its fragile habitats.

Great Plains: America’s Lingering Wild celebrates those habitats in picture and word and at the same time unflinchingly poses a challenge: Will we irreparably harm these remarkable grasslands, or save them for the benefit of future generations?

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Two hundred years ago, before the gun, the plow, the pump, and the fence created one of the most altered environments on Earth, the world’s greatest natural grasslands teemed with life. But in the blink of an eye, modernization forever altered the American prairie. Scores of species vanished or were marginalized, and in the span of a century small towns bloomed, then withered, as economic and climatic forces shifted. Today, the great expanse of the Great Plains — measuring some 500 to 700 miles wide and 1,800 miles long — is a blank slate in the American consciousness. The big empty, fly-over country, the outback.

The immense distances, infinite horizons, enveloping skies, and harsh climate of the Plains have always conveyed to newcomers a sense of strangeness and unpredictability. Some 18,000 years ago, when humans first ventured onto the Plains, they chose not to stay, but thousands of years later European-American settlers saw the potential of the endless grasslands. Great Plains: America’s Lingering Wild recaptures that beckoning landscape where pioneers once saw hope. As this book attests, promise survives on the Great Plains.

Photographer Michael Forsberg documents the Plains’ sprawling tableau, its diversity and grandeur, with his powerful images. He finds the gritty prairie survivors and shows the potential for species renewal, given the wisdom and will to conserve the remaining natural ecosystems. U.S. Poet Laureate Ted Kooser, preeminent geographer David Wishart, and writer-rancher Dan O’Brien add their own elegant, thoughtful voices to describe the magnificent beauties — and quandaries — of the Great Plains. The volume’s iconic cover of a bison beneath an immense and shifting prairie sky captures this book’s essence. Change and adaptability are constant and essential to all life on the prairie, but the human hand now lays more heavily than ever on its fragile habitats.

Great Plains: America’s Lingering Wild celebrates those habitats in picture and word and at the same time unflinchingly poses a challenge: Will we irreparably harm these remarkable grasslands, or save them for the benefit of future generations?

Two hundred years ago, before the gun, the plow, the pump, and the fence created one of the most altered environments on Earth, the world’s greatest natural grasslands teemed with life. But in the blink of an eye, modernization forever altered the American prairie. Scores of species vanished or were marginalized, and in the span of a century small towns bloomed, then withered, as economic and climatic forces shifted. Today, the great expanse of the Great Plains — measuring some 500 to 700 miles wide and 1,800 miles long — is a blank slate in the American consciousness. The big empty, fly-over country, the outback.

The immense distances, infinite horizons, enveloping skies, and harsh climate of the Plains have always conveyed to newcomers a sense of strangeness and unpredictability. Some 18,000 years ago, when humans first ventured onto the Plains, they chose not to stay, but thousands of years later European-American settlers saw the potential of the endless grasslands. Great Plains: America’s Lingering Wild recaptures that beckoning landscape where pioneers once saw hope. As this book attests, promise survives on the Great Plains.

Photographer Michael Forsberg documents the Plains’ sprawling tableau, its diversity and grandeur, with his powerful images. He finds the gritty prairie survivors and shows the potential for species renewal, given the wisdom and will to conserve the remaining natural ecosystems. U.S. Poet Laureate Ted Kooser, preeminent geographer David Wishart, and writer-rancher Dan O’Brien add their own elegant, thoughtful voices to describe the magnificent beauties — and quandaries — of the Great Plains. The volume’s iconic cover of a bison beneath an immense and shifting prairie sky captures this book’s essence. Change and adaptability are constant and essential to all life on the prairie, but the human hand now lays more heavily than ever on its fragile habitats.

Great Plains: America’s Lingering Wild celebrates those habitats in picture and word and at the same time unflinchingly poses a challenge: Will we irreparably harm these remarkable grasslands, or save them for the benefit of future generations?

“The prairie is a minimalist landscape, anything but flashy. Forsberg’s discerning eye frames its spare beauty in exquisite detail and lovely sweep. To spend time with this book is to understand why the Great Plains matter.” –Chris Johns, Editor, National Geographic Magazine.

“The Great Plains of America are not for sissies, but those who respond to their haunting beauty will not be driven off. The photographer Michael Forsberg… has spent a long time looking at the Great Plains and now he has shared what he saw.” – Larry McMurtry, author of Lonesome Dove.

“Great Plains strikes me as a signal event in the history of American publishing, a true event where the authors Ted Kooser, David Wishart, Dan O’Brien and the simply fabulous photographer Michael Forsberg are a perfectly graceful mix. I have crisscrossed this area dozens of times, and it was wonderful to see my grand memories between the covers.” – Jim Harrison, author of Legends of the Fall.

The Great Plains are a dynamic but often forgotten landscape - overlooked, undervalued, misunderstood and in desperate need of conservation. This book helps lead the way forward, informing and inspiring readers to recognize the wild spirit and splendor of this irreplaceable part of the  planet. A truly remarkable cast - Mike is joined by writers Ted Kooser, David Wishart and Dan O'Brien. 250 pages, 200+ color and black & white photographs, 12" x 12"

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