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The Paradise of All These Parts: A Natural History of Boston
 
 
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The Paradise of All These Parts: A Natural History of Boston [Hardcover]

John Mitchell (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 1, 2008
In 1614, explorer John Smith sailed into what was to become Boston Harbor and referred to the wild lands and waters around him as "the Paradise of all these parts." Within fifteen years, the Puritans were developing the tadpoleshaped Shawmut Peninsula, as members of the Massachusett tribe fled. Now, nearly four hundred years later, one must wonder what remains of John Smith's "Paradise."

Equipped with wit, intellect, and an innate curiosity about people and places, John Hanson Mitchell strolls through Boston's streets, chronicling the nonhuman inhabitants and surprisingly diverse plant life, as well as the eccentric characters he meets at various turns. Using his modern observations as a starting point, he tells the fascinating stories of the tribal leaders, naturalists, community activists, and organizations who worked to preserve nature in the city over generations, from the Victory Gardens of the Fenway to the expansive woods of Franklin Park.

But much of the history is in the land itself. As he battles traffic on notorious Route 128, Mitchell considers the ancient origins of the rocks that line the highway and those that form the city's foundation. A walk across Boston Common calls to mind the Tremount Hills, flattened by seventeenthcentury newcomers; only Beacon Hill remains. A stroll through the Back Bay allows Mitchell to imagine the Charles River, so polluted by sewage that it became a public nuisance and was partially covered over with a massive nineteenthcentury landfill. With this natural history in mind, Mitchell explores both ancient and new green space from Chelsea to South Boston, including the greenway formed by the Big Dig.

Endlessly readable and full of personality, The Paradise of All These Parts offers Boston visitors and residents alike a whole new perspective on one of America's oldest cities.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In this meditation that devolves into an unfocused meander, Mitchell (A Ceremonial Place) purports to treat of Boston's deeper places, its rocks and rivers, hills and hollows, trees and shrubs, and the wild animals that once inhabited these shores. While he does present some surprising information—the volcanic underpinnings of the geographical area; 5,000-year-old Native American fish weirs discovered around Copley Square; the history of Storrow Drive—his material is entirely unsourced and slackly structured. Phrases such as may have, must have, one can imagine or so it is believed—this last given without ever indicating by whom—obscure the historical narratives. Furthermore, Mitchell's digressive personal musings are littered with social- and ethno-psychologizing (Italians worship the World Cup trophy, Indians willingly wipe out and decimate beaver and deer) or are devoted to boohooing the automobile and post–19th-century modernity. A frame anecdote, about the author's brother refurbishing a boat, fails to provide any unifying force, nor is this material helped by clichés such as mean streets and sleep of reason. What little the reader learns of Boston's original natural environment gets lost amid Mitchell's wandering attention and vague language. (Aug.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

A surprising and gracefully written exploration of Boston's true nature. If you love this city, you will love this book.—Eric Jay Dolin, author of Leviathan: The History of Whaling in America

"Hands-on and eloquent - a lover's rhapsody."—Edward Hoagland

"Like Vladimir Nabokov, John Hanson Mitchell is a writer with an eye for nature's curious details, rather than a naturalist who practices writing. His new natural history of Boston is actually more a history of naturalists, explorers, conservationists and others at play on nature's grand stage with lots of juicy subplots and a large cast of engaging eccentrics. Irresistible."—Christopher W. Leahy, chair of the Massachusetts Audubon Society and author of The Birdwatcher's Companion to North American Birdlife

"John Hanson Mitchell tells the story of how geology, nature, natives and new arrivals have continually made and remade the place we call Boston. His amiable tale rambles easily from rocks to rivers to red light districts, interweaving natural and human history in a way that's quietly but deeply meaningful."—Ginger Strand, author of Inventing Niagara: Beauty, Power, and Lies

"Like Thoreau, Mitchell has a genius for sauntering, and I can't imagine a better rambling companion. "—David Gessner, author of Soaring with Fidel: An Osprey Odyssey from Cape Cod to Cuba and Beyond

"A wonderful piece of work: lively, thought-provoking and totally absorbing. The city of Boston has been chopped to pieces, riddled with tunnels, and surrounded by fill, but as Mitchell reveals in The Paradise of All These Parts, it is still a place of wonder."—Nathaniel Philbrick, author of Mayflower: A Story of Courage, Community, and War

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Beacon Press (August 1, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 080707148X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0807071489
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.4 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,357,926 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

John Hanson Mitchell's earlier work is focused on a square mile tract of land known as Scratch Flat, located about thirty-five miles north-west of Boston. Mitchell has used this anomalous landscape of rolling hills, farms, forests and encroaching suburbs to explore his continuing interest in natural and human history and the whole question of place in human cultures,both native and European. Best known of this series of books is the first, Ceremonial Time:Fifteen Thousand Years on One Square Mile.

Later books explore the relationship between culture, nature, and place. These works deal with such disparate subjects as the relationship between Italian gardens and the American wilderness and the role of the sun in various cultures, outlined in the book Following the Sun, a 1500 mile bicycle journey he made from Cadiz in Spain, north to the Isle of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides. His latest book, The Paradise of all These Parts, is a natural history of the little peninsula that became the city of Boston.

 

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A casual & painless approach to learning environmental history, September 13, 2008
This review is from: The Paradise of All These Parts: A Natural History of Boston (Hardcover)
As the title suggests, Mitchell's book traces the natural history of the Shawmut Peninsula, better known today as downtown Boston and hardly recognizable as such a distinctive landform. In his singular "walkabout" style, Mitchell walks and drives around the metropolis, leading us through its geologic origins and survival of the ice ages to the eventual arrival of various animal species. Anyone who looks at Boston today will be amused at comparing the contemporary scene to its volcanic beginnings or as a playground for roaming woolly mammoths. (Whether or not the place was wilder back then, than it is today, is a matter of opinion.)

Among the new residents was the "bipedal primate" who had made its way across the North American continent from its ur-home in Siberia. Of course, that animal's presence gradually altered much about the land, even as the creature itself changed in appearance and nationality. The familiar story proceeds from those natives to British colonists and a wide assortment of immigrants. The nineteenth and twentieth centuries brought new ideas and requirements to Boston residents; and the city became a home for both land preservationists/reformers and city planners/developers. Thus began a push-me-pull-you relationship of tearing down, building up, and saving green. That trend continues today.

Mitchell is an expert at reading clues in the landscape and interpreting the printed histories. He also shows no fear by daring to chat with the locals he meets along his semi-circular journey. He puts so much of himself into the writing that each chapter is a subtle memoir as well. The bottom line is that some form of Nature continues on the landscape, no matter how much concrete is poured and no matter how many highways and high-rises are added. "Nature is life," reads the inscription Mitchell finds on a granite boulder in a park in East Boston. Indeed, it is so.

Readers who enjoy John Hanson Mitchell's books and this kind of scrutiny of an urban setting may also appreciate John Tallmadge's "The Cincinnati Arch: Learning from Nature in the City" and Marie Winn's "Red-Tails in Love: A Wildlife Drama in Central Park." A longer geologic road trip can be taken with John McPhee in "In Suspect Terrain."
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Pleasant read despite negativity, February 2, 2010
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This review is from: The Paradise of All These Parts: A Natural History of Boston (Hardcover)
I dream of books that will explain to me the specific geology and natural history of the Boston area and other places I know well, and this book comes as close to doing this as any book I know. Unfortunately the geology remains a bit vague, with handwaving about volcanoes and the ice age, and the natural history is presented as a descent from a pristine paradise to a modern disaster of roads and buildings and *people*. He much prefers birds, and clearly despises cars, although he drives a clunker. I find Boston to be a beautiful city, where people have cared to preserve and restore a considerable portion of the land as open. But it seems it could never be enough, or pure enough, for the author. It was great to learn about some parks that are new to me in East Boston and near Franklin Park to explore. But I found his constant harping on the development of Boston into a city as a terrible thing depressing. Much of the history was of great interest, and with that huge caveat I recommend the book to everyone who loves Boston and is curious about how the city developed. But I can't believe there's no index or bibliography!
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5.0 out of 5 stars A refreshing look at historical Boston before the humans arrived., November 3, 2011
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This is a very engaging story. John Hansen Mitchell takes us on the most interesting walk triggering imagination along with factual natural history dispersed with the nation's history. What lies beneath the cacophony of any city makes its evolution so much more intriguing and the fact that Boston is explored this way gives a unique opportunity to really know the city I took for granted when growing up there. If my early education included some of this offering, would have enjoyed learning that much more. The approach and subtlety of style invites the reader to walk with the author as if a wise grandfather speaking of wisdom without preaching. Being engaged with this book we can know more of where we have been and maybe have more clarity about where we may be going.
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