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Trees, Why Do you Wait?: America's Changing Rural Culture
 
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Trees, Why Do you Wait?: America's Changing Rural Culture [Paperback]

Richard Critchfield (Author)

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Book Description

May 1, 1991
Richard Critchfield, author of the best-selling books "Villages" and "An American Looks at Britain," examines the inescapable link between the decline of America's rural roots and the decay of our cities. "Trees, Why Do You Wait?" is a moving oral history chronicling the changes taking place in rural America. Through it, we meet real people of the heartland and feel the suffering and the strength in their relationship to the land.

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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

This is a distressing study of the decline of two small farming communities in Iowa and North Dakota by the author of Villages (LJ 5/15/81). In the first chapter, Critchfield discusses the development and decline of rural societies around the world. He then features interviews with prosperous, semi-prosperous, and poor farmers from the two communities who provide important insights into the sociological and economic forces that contributed to the decline of farming in their areas. Critchfield asserts that the survival of the urban sector is dependent upon a thriving rural sector, and he presents proposals for saving family farms and rural communities from prominent people in agriculture. Like Janet Fitchen in Endangered Spaces, Endangered Places ( LJ 3/1/91), Critchfield offers a disturbing look at America's rural infrastructure.
-Irwin Weintraub, Rutgers Univ. Libs., Piscataway, N.J.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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