Roundup
Just days after being reviewed on this blog, Decade of the Wolf, the book by Gary Ferguson and Douglas W. Smith, scores as the lead science story in today's New York Times.
Meanwhile a political crisis leads Slate Magazine to explore the ways that aspen trees change color in the fall. I was asking the same question last week, though more because an early snowstorm hardly halted the beauty out my window. Then again, I didn't bother to call someone in Boulder and get the full science.
Finally, I'm quite intrigued by the premise of Dan Dagget's new book, The Gardeners of Eden. Dagget's previous book, Beyond the Rangeland Conflict, chronicled some of the biggest -- though least heralded -- environmental success stories of the 1990s.
I'm always interested in feedback, via info at johnclaytonbooks dott com
Meanwhile a political crisis leads Slate Magazine to explore the ways that aspen trees change color in the fall. I was asking the same question last week, though more because an early snowstorm hardly halted the beauty out my window. Then again, I didn't bother to call someone in Boulder and get the full science.
Finally, I'm quite intrigued by the premise of Dan Dagget's new book, The Gardeners of Eden. Dagget's previous book, Beyond the Rangeland Conflict, chronicled some of the biggest -- though least heralded -- environmental success stories of the 1990s.
I'm always interested in feedback, via info at johnclaytonbooks dott com