|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
2 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Loving, rounded, view of a complex ecological issue,
By Bryce Butler mamowry@msn.com (New Salem (Albany county) New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bay Country (Hardcover)
"Bay Country" does justice to the many legitimate claims on the Chesapeake Bay. Horton loves the bay, its grasses, oysters, crabs, and rockfish; the watermen who live off it and exploit it, and the ways of life and physical artifacts -- bridges, old roads, cabins -- people have built around it. He also knows its lovers, including him, are killing it. He portrays the bay and its life, its tributaries(including a wonderful essey on how hard it is to wring every last pollutant from sewer water) the watermen, their traditional (and tight) communities, and the hard life they make from its resources. He has chapters on wind and energy use by people and animals. Horton poetically evokes the bay's charms, in a book that is part nature writing, part sociology, part ecological economy, and part a gloss on Pogo's famous remark, "We have met the enemy and he is us." Not a particularly hopeful book, but a very realistic one, fair to all sides and to the glorious bay itself.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Reliably Engrossing,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Bay Country (Maryland Paperback Bookshelf) (Paperback)
Reading Tom Horton is always a reliably engrossing experience. His style is fresh, and it compels me to look at Chesapeake Country in ever-richer ways.
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
Bay Country by Tom Horton (Hardcover - September 1, 1987)
Used & New from: $0.59
| ||