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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Forest &Crag, June 22, 2000
This book is a great indepth look at mountainiering in the northeastern United States. It has to be the most complete history of the northeast mountains. It starts back when Darby Fields and many others started to explore the area, and runs through the nineteen eighties. Laura and Guy Waterman researched for ten years in order to put this book together. They are both acomplished writers and have a way of making a history exciting and humorous. It is a great tribute to the early settlers of the area and how hearty they were. I recomend this book to anyone who has done some hiking in the northeastern United States or are just interested in the history of the land. This is a must buy for all serious northeastern mountainiers.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Simply the best book on Hiking in New England!, January 14, 2001
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Glen Murley (Sagamore Beach, MA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
A friend turned me on to this book. I had passed on it a few times due in part to it's huge size. However I found that it was everything I ever wanted to know about the mountains and forests of New England. It's written in a very accesible manner that never leaves the reader without a smile for long. It's very obvious that the text contained in this book was researched with an artists attention to detail. And it shows in the nearly 200 pages of appendix!

To those in the North East the name Guy Waterman and his wife Laura have long been synonymis with hiking and climbing in the the region. A lot of hulabaloo was made over his death and the poetic yet puzzling statement it makes. In any case, after reading this book it becomes easy to see why he was so well loved, respected, and admired by so many of his peers.

If this book was $100.00 it would still be worth it. The amount of labor that went into this book is priceless. It was very obviously a labor of love. Buy it and read it.

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Scholarly, lively, and fun, January 19, 2004
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This review is from: Forest and Crag, A History of Hiking, Trail Blazing, and (Paperback)
It looks big, scholarly, and intimidating. It is big, scholarly, lively, fascinating, and fun. (I had it on the shelf for several years, afraid to bring it down because it was so thick. But once I started reading it -- short chapters, lively prose, cogent discussions -- I wished it were longer because I didn't want it to end.) Although obstensibly a history of trail-building in America's northeast, it is just as much a story of humanity's relation with the environment -- and in this role it is far more trenchant and closely reasoned than Simon Schama's "Landscape and Memory". When I started, I thought I would like only those chapters about mountain regions where I had already hiked, but in fact I found the chapters on regions I hadn't yet hiked to be even more fascinating.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Surprisingly Interesting Read!, May 4, 2009
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This review is from: Forest and Crag, A History of Hiking, Trail Blazing, and (Paperback)
Shortly after starting to hike as a past time I became curious about the history of hiking. There were very few books on the subject and this seemed like a good one to start with. It has answered many of my questions as well as provided hours of entertaining stories about people and places in the Northeast US.

The book is big, well researched and interesting....
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5.0 out of 5 stars Northeast Mountains, Top to Bottom, December 26, 2011
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This review is from: Forest and Crag, A History of Hiking, Trail Blazing, and (Paperback)
This is one of those rare books that delivers more than one expects. To start out, the authors look at the mountains in the northeastern part of the US and write about the way they were viewed by the colonists and Americans, before 1830. They examine personal writings such as diaries, newspapers, pamphlets, and the like. Also paintings. The second section of the book looks at the mountains as "sublime," from 1830-1870, again analyzing passages from writings both personal and public.

The third section of this long but never boring book examines mountains as "places to walk," 1870-1910. The fourth looks at the mountains of the northeast as "escape from urban society," 1910-1950, and the fifth and final section examines mountains "as places for recreation," 1950 - present.

The book contains figures and tables, an appendix, reference notes, and a lengthy index. I find this book an excellent reference source as well as a different and exciting way to learn about aspects of American history.
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Forest and Crag, A History of Hiking, Trail Blazing, and
Forest and Crag, A History of Hiking, Trail Blazing, and by Laura Waterman (Paperback - November 1, 2003)
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